Abstract

The non-histone chromatin proteins of growing and non-growing tissues were compared by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The tissues studied were normal rat liver, regenerating rat liver, thioacetamide-treated rat liver, normal rat kidney, Novikoff hepatoma and Walker 256 carcinosarcoma. Although most of the protein components were common to all of the tissues studied, the densities and sizes of spots C18, CP, C21, C25, CQ, CR, CS and CT were greater in the growing tissues than in the non-growing tissues, including the thioacetamide-treated liver. In the latter, the increased densities and sizes of spots C18, C21 and CQ are presumably related to the markedly increased nucleolar size rather than to cell division. Accordingly the increases in sizes and densities of spots C25, CP, CR, CS and CT are apparently of importance to the growth processes of normal and tumor tissues. The number of tissue specific proteins was small compared with the number of proteins in this fraction and includes BP and CBL for normal liver, BJ′ for kidney and CG′, CH′ and CP $ ́ for the tumors.

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