Abstract

Five of the stable low molecular weight RNA species in the HeLa cell nucleus have been localized in RNP complexes in the cell nucleus. The two abundant species C and D and the three minor species F, G′ and H are found in RNP particles following two different methods of preparation. Sonication of nuclei releases the five small RNAs and also the hnRNA in RNPs that sediment in a range from 10 to 150 S. Alternatively, incubation of intact nuclei at elevated temperature and pH releases four of the small RNAs and degraded hnRNA in more slowly sedimenting structures. When nuclear RNPs obtained by sonication are digested with RNAase in the presence of EDTA, the hnRNA is degraded and the hnRNPs sediment at 30 S. The structures containing the small RNA species D are similarly shifted to 30 S particles by RNAase and EDTA but not by either agent alone. In contrast, the sedimentation of complexes containing species G′ and H are not altered by exposure to RNAase/EDTA and small RNA species C and F are unstable under these conditions. In isopycnic metrizamide/ 2H 2O gradients species D and hnRNA accumulate at a density characteristic of RNP particles. They have a similar but not identical distribution. Species D is released from large RNPs by salt concentrations of 0.1 m-NaCl or greater, while the hnRNA remains in large RNP particles. In contrast, the structures containing species G′ and H are stable in 0.3 m-NaCl. All five of the small nuclear RNA species and the hnRNAs are released from rapidly sedimenting complexes by the ionic detergent sodium deoxycholate. It is suggested that the low molecular weight RNA species play a structural role in RNP particles in the cell nucleus and that a subpopulation of species D may be associated with the particles that package the hnRNA.

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