Abstract
When rat liver nuclei were digested with nuclease, we found that the chromatin-bound RNA polymerase II was liberated as two distinct complexes, peak 1 and peak 2, which seemed to reflect different functional states in cell nuclei. We further examined their occurrence in nuclear digests of various tissues of rats and the following results were obtained. Upon digestion with micrococcal nuclease of nuclei from brain, spleen, testis and kidney, chromatin-bound RNA polymerase II was liberated as two distinct forms which sedimented differently in a sucrose density gradient. The sedimentation rate of peak 1 varied depending on the tissue nuclei examined. After high salt or RNase treatment of the nuclear digests, peak 1 from liver, brain, spleen and testis nuclei showed the same sedimentation rate as did kidney peak 1, the rate for which remained unchanged by these treatments. The results suggested that peak 1 complexes from various tissue nuclei had basically the same structural organization, and we confirmed this by electrophoretic studies on RNase-treated liver and kidney nuclear digests. Peak 2 from various tissue nuclei exhibited identical sedimentation rates. Thus, the chromatin-bound RNA polymerase II seems to exist commonly in two distinct states in cell nuclei of rats.
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