Abstract

Isolated liver nucleoli from rats treated for 3 days with thioacetamide contained an enzyme activity which specifically degraded conjugate protein A24. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that the amount of protein A24 in chromatin decreased during incubation at 37 degrees C for 60 min with these nucleoli. Concomitantly, a marked increase was found in the content of free ubiquitin, the nonhistone component of protein A24. Incubation of 3H-labeled protein A24 with the thioacetamide-treated liver nucleoli resulted in the linear release of 3H-labeled histone 2A and 3H-free ubiquitin in the presence of phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) for 2 h. Pretreatment of the nucleoli with trypsin or by heating at 80 degrees C for 10 min inhibited their ability to cleave protein A24. Protein A24 lyase catalyzes the reaction: protein A24 leads to histone 2A plus ubiquitin.

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