Poly(adenylic acid)-containing and -deficient messenger RNA of mouse liver
- PMID: 6111346
- DOI: 10.1016/0005-2787(81)90221-5
Poly(adenylic acid)-containing and -deficient messenger RNA of mouse liver
Abstract
RNA was isolated and fractionated into poly(A)-containing and -deficient classes by oligo(dT) chromatography. Approximately 99% of the poly(A) material bound to the oligo(dT); that which did not bind contained substantially shorter poly(A) chains. All RNA fractions retained an ability to initiate cell-free translation, with the poly(A)-deficient fraction containing half the total translational activity, i.e., mRNA. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel analysis of the cell-free translation products revealed three classes of mRNA: 1, mRNA preferentially containing poly(A), including the abundant liver mRNA species; 2, poly(A)-deficient mRNA, including many mid- and low-abundant mRNAs exhibiting less than 10% contamination in the poly(A)-containing fraction fraction; and 3, bimorphic species of mRNA proportioned between both the poly(A)-containing and -deficient fractions. Poly(A)-containing and bimorphic mRNA classes were further characterized by cDNA hybridizations. The capacity of various RNA fractions to prime cDNA synthesis was determined. Compared to total RNA, the poly(A)-containing RNA retained 70% of the priming capacity, while 20% was found in the poly(A)-deficient fraction. Poly(A)-containing, poly(A)-deficient, and total RNA fractions were hybridized to cDNAs synthesized from (+)poly(A)RNA. Poly(A)-containing RNA hybridized with an average R0t 1/2 approximately 20 times faster than total RNA. Poly(A)-deficient RNA hybridized with an average R0t 1/2 approximately 3-4 times slower than total RNA. These R0t 1/2 shifts indicated that in excess of three-quarters of the total hybridizable RNA was recovered in the poly(A)-containing fraction and that less than one-quarter was recovered in the poly(A)-deficient RNA fraction. Abundancy classes were less distinct in heterologous hybridizations. In all cases the extent of hybridization was similar, indicating that while the amount of various mRNA species varied among the RNA fractions, most hybridizing species of RNA were present in each RNA fraction. cDNA to the abundant class of mRNAs was purified and hybridized to both (+)- and (-)poly(A)RNA. Messenger RNA corresponding to the more abundant species was enriched in the poly(A)-containing fraction at least 2-fold over the less abundant species of mRNA, with less than 10% of the abundant mRNAs appearing inthe poly(A)-deficient fraction.
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