Abstract

The effects of polyamines on DNA synthesis in vitro using various subcellular DNA polymerase fractions from normal and tumour-bearing rat livers, and tumour cells were investigated. When nuclear and mitochondrial DNA polymerase fractions were used, DNA synthesis on activated DNA was increased 3.5-8-fold by the addition of 20 mM putrescine or cadaverine. However, DNA synthesis was not stimulated by the addition of spermidine or spermine at any concentration tested. In contrast, DNA synthesis using the cytoplasmic DNA polymerase fraction was not stimulated at various concentrations of any of the four polyamines tested. The stimulatory effects of putrescine and cadaverine were absent when nuclear fractions from tumour-bearing rat liver or from tumour cells were used. In addition, in vitro DNA synthesis was not stimulated by 20 mM putrescine or cadaverine when nuclear extracts from the livers of rats administered putrescine subcutaneously were used. The specific activities of DNA polymerases extracted from tumour cells and tumour-bearing rat liver were already fully stimulated. These results suggest that DNA polymerases in tumour cells and tumour-bearing liver cells are stimulated by trapped putrescine produced in tumour cells and are thus no longer activated by exogenous putrescine.

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