Regulation of histone mRNA in the unperturbed cell cycle: evidence suggesting control at two posttranscriptional steps.
- 1 May 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 11 (5) , 2416-2424
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.11.5.2416
Abstract
The levels of histone mRNA increase 35-fold as selectively detached mitotic CHO cells progress from mitosis through G1 and into S phase. Using an exogenous gene with a histone 39 end which is not sensitive to transcriptional or half-life regulation, we show that 39 processing is regulated as cells progress from G1 to S phase. The half-life of histone mRNA is similar in G1- and S-phase cells, as measured after inhibition of transcription by actinomycin D (dactinomycin) or indirectly after stabilization by the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. Taken together, these results suggest that the change in histone mRNA levels between G1- and S-phase cells must be due to an increase in the rate of biosynthesis, a combination of changes in transcription rate and processing efficiency. In G2 phase, there is a rapid 35-fold decrease in the histone mRNA concentration which our results suggest is due primarily to an altered stability of histone mRNA. These results are consistent with a model for cell cycle regulation of histone mRNA levels in which the effects on both RNA 39 processing and transcription, rather than alterations in mRNA stability, are the major mechanisms by which low histone mRNA levels are maintained during G1. ImagesKeywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Localization and expression of U1 RNA in early mouse embryo developmentDevelopmental Biology, 1988
- Translation is required for regulation of histone mRNA degradationCell, 1987
- Characterization of mouse H3.3-like histone genesGene, 1987
- Isolation of a Mammalian Sequence Capable of Conferring Cell Cycle Regulation to a Heterologous GeneScience, 1985
- Differential expression of two clusters of mouse histone genesJournal of Molecular Biology, 1985
- Inhibition of DNA replication coordinately reduces cellular levels of core and H1 histone mRNAs: requirement for protein synthesisBiochemistry, 1984
- Separation of basal histone synthesis from S-phase histone synthesis in dividing cellsCell, 1981
- Use of the mitotic selection procedure for cell cycle analysis: Comparison between the X-ray and cycloheximide G2 markersExperimental Cell Research, 1972
- Inhibition of DNA synthesis in synchronized Chinese hamster cells treated in G1 with cycloheximideExperimental Cell Research, 1971
- Growth and nucleic acid synthesis in synchronously dividing populations of HeLa cellsExperimental Cell Research, 1963