Abstract

The DNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity of isolated nuclei from human peripheral blood has been shown to increase following stimulation with phytohaemagglutinin (PHA). Using the toxin α-amanitin it has been possible to demonstrate that within 4 h of the addition of PHA there is a two-fold increase in the amanitin-resistant polymerase activity (polymerase A) with little increase in the sensitive polymerase activity (polymerase B). 24 h following PHA stimulation the amanitin-resistant activity is stimulated 4–5 fold and the amanitin-sensitive activity less than two-fold. The susceptibility of this increased amanitin-resistant activity to low doses of actinomycin D both in vivo and in vitro indicates that the amanitin-resistant enzyme is mainly engaged in ribosomal RNA precursor synthesis. These changes in DNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity closely correspond to the observed changes in ribosomal and non-ribosomal RNA synthesis following lymphocyte stimulation. The increased polymerase A activity is diminished by a 1 h incubation of the cells with cycloheximide added 24 h after PHA whereas polymerase B activity remains unaffected. This indicates that the polymerase A activity observed after transformation is dependent on continuing protein synthesis. In our incubation conditions the polymerase activity observed in isolated nuclei appeared to be almost wholly attributable to elongation of nascent RNA molecules attached to the endogenous DNA template.

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