Abstract

The effects of nalidixic acid and hydroxyurea on nuclear and chloroplast DNA formation in cultured cells of Nicotiana tabacum were investigated. At low concentrations (5 and 20 μg/ml) nalidixic acid, an inhibitor of DNA gyrase, exhibited a greater inhibitory effect on plastid DNA synthesis than on nuclear DNA formation. Since the plastid genome is a circular double-stranded DNA, this is consistent with the proven involvement of a DNA gyrase in the replication of closed circular duplex DNA genomes in procaryotic cells. At a high concentration of nalidixic acid (50 μg/ml), DNA synthesis in both the plastid and nuclear compartment was rapidly inhibited. Removal of the drug from the culture medium led to the resumption of DNA synthesis in 8 h. Hydroxyurea, an inhibitor of ribonucleoside diphosphate reductase, also depresses nuclear as well as plastid DNA formation. Removal of hydroxyurea from the blocked cells leads to a burst of nuclear DNA synthesis, suggesting that the cells had been synchronized at the G1/S boundary. The recovery of plastid DNA synthesis occurs within the same time frame as that of nuclear DNA. However, whereas plastid DNA formation is then maintained at a constant rate, nuclear DNA synthesis reaches a peak and subsequently declines. These results indicate that the synthesis of plastid DNA is independent of the cell cycle events governing nuclear DNA formation in cultured plant cells.

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