Antibodies against embryonic chick bone collagen were prepared in rabbits and were purified by affinity and ion exchange chromatography until collagen-specific and RNase-free. 125I-anti-collagen antibodies were used to locate the collagen-synthesizing polysomes of 8-day chick embryo wings and legs on sucrose gradients by measuring the polysome associated radioactivity. The 125I-anti-collagen antibodies bound predominantly to polysomes in the heavy region of sucrose gradients. These binding sites could only be saturated with homologous anti-collagen antibodies. Further evidence for the specificity of this reaction was provided by a correlation of the amount of anti-collagen antibodies bound in the heavy regions of sucrose gradients with the amount of collagen being synthesized by a particular tissue. The validity of this immunochemical method was confirmed by localizing collagen-synthesizing polysomes by an independent method which utilizes their ability to incorporate [3H]proline into collagen peptides in a cell-free system. The collagen-synthesizing polysomes are found in a single, rather broad peak in these gradients. The results of shortening the centrifugation time indicate that larger species of collagen-synthesizing polysomes are not present in these tissues. Partial purification of the collagen-synthesizing polysomes may be achieved by specifically sedimenting them after treatment with anti-collagen antibodies followed by goat anti-rabbit antibodies.
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Polyribosomes bound to the outer nuclear membrane was isolated from purified preparations of chicken embryo cell nuclei. These polyribosomes were shown to consist fractions forming unstable complexes with the nuclear membrane which can be separated from the latter by treatment with high ionic strength buffer solutions. Using sedimentation and gradient density analyses, the nuclei-bound RNP complexes were shown to be predominantly composed of 80S monosomes which take an active part in collagen polypeptide synthesis in cell-free protein-synthesizing systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBraz J Med Biol Res
July 1988
Instituto Ludwig de Pesquisa sobre o Câncer, São Paulo, Brasil.
1. A new cloning procedure is described for cDNA synthesis from mRNA released by in vitro translation of polysomes in a cell-free amino acid incorporating system. The usefulness of the method lies in the feasibility of employing nanogram amounts of mRNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleic Acids Res
February 1984
A new procedure for the synthesis of double stranded cDNA, based upon release of mRNA by "in vitro" translation, was used to clone type IV collagen. Collagen synthesizing polysomes selectively isolated from a mouse parietal yolk sac carcinoma (PYS-2) were used for translation in an heterologous cell-free system. Translation products were collagenase-sensitive and displayed an electrophoretic mobility correspondent to type IV collagen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmong various membrane-bound polyribosomes from chicken embryos the polyribosomes loosely bound with membranes proved to be highly active in synthesis of total proteins as well as of collagens in vitro. These data suggest that polyribosomes loosely bound with membranes were not an impurity of free polyribosomes in the total preparation of the membrane-bound polyribosomes. These polyribosomes constituted a definite class of polyribosomes active in the synthesis of secreted proteins (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProcollagen mRNA was purified from collagen synthesizing polysomes obtained from an experimental guinea pig granuloma, and iodinated in vitro. The procollagen 125I-labelled mRNA was hibridized with granuloma and liver guinea pig DNA in vast DNA excess conditions. A Cot 1/2 800-900 mol .
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