Abstract

Intracellular migration of species-specific nuclear antigens was studied in chick-rat heterokaryons. These cells were produced by virus-induced or spontaneous fusion of different chick cells with rat myoblasts or myotubes. Chick erythrocyte nuclei introduced into rat myogenic cells increased in volume and were reactivated to synthesize RNA. As the chick erythrocyte nuclei enlarged, they rapidly accumulated rat nuclear antigens. Rat nucleolar and nucleoplasmic antigens assumed a distribution in the chick nuclei corresponding to that in rat nuclei. In hybrid myotubes formed by the spontaneous fusion of chick myoblasts and rat myoblasts antigen exchange was at a much lower level. Some exchange of both rat and chick nuclear antigens could, however, be detected also in this system. Thus chick nuclear envelope and nucleolar antigens migrated into the rat myoblast nuclei and assumed an intranuclear localization analogous to that in chick nuclei. On the basis of these results it appears that antigenic nuclear macromolecules are constantly exchanged between the rat and chick nuclear compartments and the cytoplasm of the heterokaryon. During the rapid nuclear swelling which occurs when chick erythrocyte nuclei are activated in rat myoblast heterokaryons, the inward migration of rat nuclear antigens into the chick erythrocyte nucleus is more impressive than the migration of chick antigens into the rat nuclei.

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