Differentiation of population of peripheral blood lymphocytes into cells bearing sheep erythrocyte receptors in vitro by human thymic extractVogel, J E; Incefy, G S; Good, R A
doi: N/Apmid: 1079347
A small population of human marrow cells has been shown to be differentiated in vitro by thymic extract into cells bearing T-lymphocyte (thymus-derived lymphocyte) characteristics. By a similar method, the differentiation of human peripheral blood lymphocytes has been studied. A discontinuous gradient of bovine serum albumin was used to isolate lymphocytes into four layers and cells from layers I and III demonstrated the greatest potential for differentiation by human thymic extract. Appearance of T-lymphocyte characteristics was recognized by the spontaneous E-rosette technique with sheep erythrocytes. Ability of human marrow cells to be differentiated under the influence of human thymic extract was abolished by specific inhibitors of nucleic acid synthesis, however, had no inhibitory effect on the maturation of peripheral blood lymphocytes during a 2 hr incubation with human thymic extract but puromycin, an inhibitor of protein synthesis, abolished this differentiative step in cells of layer I. It is suggested from these studies that many of the cells in peripheral blood that are differentiable by thymic extract are at a stage of maturation more advanced than those in human marrow that are also differentiable by thymic extract.
Conformation of high-molecular-weight poly(L-valine) in solid stateYamashita, S; Yamashita, T
doi: N/Apmid: 1055391
Poly(L-valine) in various degrees of polymerization was prepared from the N-carboxyanhydride of L-valine. The high-molecular-weight polymer was fibrous and capable of forming an oriented film when cast from trifluoroacetic acid solution. The comformations were examined by Raman spectroscopy. The Raman and infrared spectra of high-molecular-weight polymer were quite different from those of low-molecular-weight and tri-fluoroacetic-acid-treated high-molecular-weight polymers. The spectral data in the amide A, I, II, III, and V regions indicated that high-molecular-weight poly(L-valine) is possibly in the alpha-helical conformation, while low-molecular-weight poly(L-valine) and high--molecular-weight poly(L-valine) treated with trifluoroacetic acid are in the beta-conformation.
Patterns of organization of actin and myosin in normal and transformed cultured cellsPollack, R; Osborn, M; Weber, K
doi: N/Apmid: 165499
The patterns of distribution of intracellular actin and myosin were examined by specific immunofluorescence in a series of normal, simian-virus-40-transformed, and revertant cell lines of rat and mouse origin. A consistent correlation was found between sensitivity to anchorage-dependent growth control and the presence of large, thick sheaths of actin-containing material. The presence of these sheaths was temperature-dependent in a rat line transformed by a temperature-sensitive mutant in the complementation group A of the oncogenic virus simian virus 40.
Sexuality in the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium giganteumErdos, G W; Raper, K B; Vogen, L K
doi: N/Apmid: 1055396
By pairing of strains of Dictyostelium giganteum in various combinations this species was shown to be heterothallic. Four mating types were identified. Some strains could not be assigned a mating type and others showed no mating reaction. No self-compatible strains were found. Mutations were introduced in several strains and genetic crosses were performed. The results of these crosses show that mating and macrocyst formation are controlled by a single locus-multiple allele incompatibility system. The results also support the view that the myxamoebae that emerge upon germination of the macrocysts are the products of meiosis.
Nucleotide sequence of the rightward operator of phage lambdaManiatis, T; Jeffrey, A; Kleid, D G
doi: N/Apmid: 1055375
The sequence of 72 base pairs of the rightward operator (O-R) of bacteriophage lambda is presented as determined with simple and rapid methods for direct DNA sequencing. The sequence of an operator mutant is also described. The methods are of general use in sequencing DNA fragments with unique 5' ends up to 50 base pairs in length. Previous experiments have shown that this operator contains multiple sites recognized by the lambda phage repressor. We believe we have identified three of these sites.
Induction of erythroid differentiation in murine virus infected eythroleukemia cells by highly polar compoundsTanaka, M; Levy, J; Terada, M; Breslow, R; Rifkind, R A; Marks, P A
doi: N/Apmid: 165480
Murine-virus-infected erythroleukemia cells cultured in a medium with dimethylsulfoxide or N,N-dimethylformamide are induced to differentiate to erythroid cells. A number of highly polar compounds have a similar effect in inducing erythroid differentiation of the virus-infected cells, as assayed by the appearance of hemoglobin. These compounds are 1-methyl-1-2-piperidone, N,N-dimethylacetamide, N-methylpyrrolidinone, N-methylacetamide, 2-pyrrolidinone, propionamide, pyridine-N-oxide, piperidone, N-methylformamide, acetamide, and triethylene glycol. It has been previously reported that dimethylsulfoxide must be present during DNA synthesis and, possibly, shortly therafter, to induce differentiation. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that dimethylsulfoxide and related polar compounds act by changing the conformation of DNA or a DNA-protein complex, causing an alteration in transcription that leads to the expression of the program of erythroid differentiation.
Abiotic, Graphitic Microstructures in Micaceous Metaquartzite about 3760 Million Years Old from Southwestern Greenland: Implications for Early Precambrian MicrofossilsNagy, Bartholomew; Zumberge, John E.; Nagy, Lois Anne
doi: N/Apmid: 16592229
An Early Precambrian micaceous metaquartzite subjected to low to moderate metamorphism in the Isua area of Southwestern Greenland was derived from the erosion of preexisting rocks which were probably sialic in composition. This metaquartzite may have been formed before the emergence of life. It contains globular particles of graphite arranged in narrow veins or along foliation or bedding planes. This rock contains no organic compounds besides traces of methane and no biologically significant elements associated with the graphite microstructures. Reaction of primitive methane with ferric oxides appears to have oxidized the methane to the vein graphite and reduced the ferric oxides to ferrous-ferric oxide (magnetite). The graphitic microstructures are likely to be abiotic in origin, although a biological origin is not impossible. Somewhat younger microstructures found in other locations on earth have often been described as microfossils; this origin should be reexamined on the basis of the above mentioned conclusions.
Genetic heterogeneity in familial hypercholesterolemia: evidence for two different mutations affecting functions of low-density lipoprotein receptorGoldstein, J L; Dana, S E; Brunschede, G Y; Brown, M S
doi: N/Apmid: 236556
Studies in cultured fibroblasts from patients with the clinical syndrome of homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia have disclosed two different mutations affecting the functions of the low density lipoprotein receptor. One of these mutations, described previously, results in a functionless receptor that does not bind low density lipoproteins. In the cells of six patients who appear to be homozygous for this mutant allele, i.e., receptor-negative homozygotes, low density lipoproteins neither suppress hydroxymethylgultaryl-CoA reductase (NADPH) mevalonate:NADP+ oxidoreductase (CoA-acylating) EC 1.1.1.34 activity nor stimulate cellular cholesterol esterification, even when examined in the presence of concentrations of lipoprotein 500 times higher than those cells. The second type of mutation, described herein, results in a receptor that has a reduced but not absent function. Fibroblasts from three subjects who possess this mutation, i.e., receptor-defective homozygotes, show partial suppression of the same enzyme activity and a detectable increase in cholesterol esterification capacity in the presence of high levels of low density lipoproteins. It was calculated that their degree of function could be achieved if they possessed only about 10% of the normal binding of low density lipoprotein. This level of binding was too low to be reliably detected by the 125-I-labeled low density lipoprotein binding assay. The finding of a second class of mutant cells in which a defect in low density lipoprotein binding is associated with simultaneous defects in both suppression of hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase activity and stimulation of cholesterol ester formation provides further evidence for the coordinate control of these two processes by the low density lipoprotein receptor.