Abstract

The addition of nutrients to long-time-starved cells of Tetrahymena pyriformis leads to a 50-60-fold increase in the rate of synthesis of ribosomal proteins (r-proteins). This is achieved by a 6-fold increase in the relative rate of r-protein synthesis and a 8-10-fold increase in the rate of total protein synthesis. Synthesis of r-proteins constitutes one third of total cellular protein synthesis 2-4 h after refeeding and the absolute rate of r-protein synthesis is approximately three-times greater than in exponentially growing cells. The synthesis of the individual r-proteins is coordinately regulated during a nutritional shift-up, and de novo synthesized r-proteins are stable. Addition of actinomycin D prevents the increase in the rate of r-protein synthesis. The rates of synthesis of rRNA and r-protein increase in concert, implying coordinate regulation. Furthermore, a comparison of the observed accumulation of r-proteins with the predicted accumulation based on the accumulation of rRNA suggests that rRNA and r-protein are synthesized in a stoichiometrically balanced way during the entire refeeding period.

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