The androgenic regulation of superhelical-DNA nicking-closing enzyme in rat ventral prostate.
The activity of superhelical-DNA nicking-closing enzyme ( NC enzyme) was measured in nuclei from rat ventral prostate by a fluorimetric assay based on the binding of ethidium bromide to supercoiled phage-PM2 DNA. The nuclear concentration of NC-enzyme activity declined rapidly after castration, although this response could be prevented by daily administration of dihydrotestosterone. The low NC-enzyme activity in involuted prostates (10% of normal) was restored to normal after 8-10 days of treatment with androgen. In the regenerating prostate the time course of restoration of NC-enzyme activity was not in phase with that of DNA synthesis. Examination of nucleosome repeat lengths and the arrangement of nucleosomes along the chromatin fibre revealed no differences in the structural organization of chromatin in prostates with high or low NC-enzyme activity. Together, these results suggest that the major role of NC enzyme is related to the onset and maintenance of differentiation in the prostate and that the activity of this enzyme is not expressed through gross alterations in chromatin structure.[1]References
- The androgenic regulation of superhelical-DNA nicking-closing enzyme in rat ventral prostate. Filipenko, J.D., Rennie, P.S., Bruchovsky, N. Biochem. J. (1981) [Pubmed]
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