Abstract

AbstractActinomycin D (0.008 μg/gm of body weight) injected intraperitoneally every two hours, produced a prompt 50% inhibition of RNA synthesis in the jejunum of mice, and a delayed inhibition of DNA synthesis, that reached its maximum inhibition (68% of control values) 4.5 hours after the first injection of actinomycin D. Autoradiographic studies indicated that this low level of actinomycin D inhibited a step in the G1 phase of the cell cycle, preventing the initiation, but not affecting the continuation, of DNA biosynthesis. The activity of DNA polymerase was not affected under these conditions. The results are substantially similar to those previously obtained with Ehrlich ascites cells growing in the peritoneal cavity of mice and can be interpreted as indicating that in the G1 phase of dividing cells there is an actinomycin sensitive step whose inhibition prevents the entrance of cells into the DNA‐synthesis phase.

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