Abstract

The in vivo phosphorylation of histones in the livers of Rana catesbeiana tadpoles was followed during the course of thyroxine-induced metamorphosis. Phosphorylation of histones H1 and H2a, and possibly of histone H4 at a low level, was observed in all animals. After correction for specific radioactivity of liver inorganic phosphate pools, an apparent wave of phosphorylation of histones was found to occur between 2 and 8 days of thyroxine treatment, with a peak increase of approximately 2- to 5-fold for histones H2a and H1. The increases in liver histone phosphorylation are approximately coincident with well-documented increases in the levels of various liver enzymes and occur in the absence of any change in the low basal rate of histone or DNA synthesis in this organ. This is apparently the first instance of increased phosphorylation of both H1 and H2a which is not coincident with or precedent to increases in cellular proliferation rates.

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