Abstract

The fraction of membrane-bound and free polysomes during different phases of the cell cycle was determined in suspension cultures of mouse plasmacytoma cells, synchronized by growth in isoleucine-deficient medium. The membrane-bound polysomes reached a maximum value (about 28 % of total polysomes) during the G 1 phase. In the S phase and G 2 phase only 18 to 20 % of the total polysomes were found to be membrane-bound. A high percentage of membrane-bound polysomes in the G 1 phase of the cell cycle agrees with the earlier finding that maximum synthesis of immunoglobulin light chain takes place on polysomes bound to the membrane in the G 1 phase of the cell cycle. The presence of a significant fraction of membrane-bound polysomes in the S and G 2 phases of the cell cycle would suggest that membrane-bound polysomes are also involved in the synthesis of proteins other than immunoglobulins. The ultrastructure of the cells during the various phases of the cell cycle was also studied. During the G 1 phase the surface of the majority of cells was distinguished by the presence of ruffles and slender villus-like cytoplasmic projections. In the S phase the surface contour tended to become smooth and even. These differences in the surface morphology may reflect the change in function which occurs during the transition from the G 1 to the S phase.

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