Abstract

A separate and distinct population of polyribosomes exists in the detergent-washed nuclei of adenovirus-infected HeLa cells. These polyribosomes, released by exposure to polynucleotides such as high molecular weight nuclear RNA or poly(U), do not appear to be cytoplasmic contaminants. Nuclear polyribosomes have a considerably lower buoyant density compared to cytoplasmic ones. Nuclear polyribosomes, in a cell-free system of protein synthesis, are six- to eight-fold less active compared to cytoplasmic ones and are insensitive to aurin tricarboxylic acid. They do not complement cytoplasmic polyribosomes in protein synthesis in the cell-free system. Finally, the number of proteins synthesized by nuclear polyribosomes is higher compared with that synthesized by the cytoplasmic ones. Only the virus-specific proteins, including P-VII, are synthesized by cytoplasmic polyribosomes. Nuclear polyribosomes, on the other hand, synthesize virusspecific proteins, including P-VII and VII, and a number of additional proteins not synthesized by the cytoplasmic ones.

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