Effect of hypoxia on nucleic acid and protein synthesis in different brain regions

Abstract
The incorporation of [methyl-3H]thymidine into DNA, of [5-3H]uridine into RNA, and of [1-14C]leucine into proteins of cerebral hemispheres, cerebellum, and brainstem of guinea pigs after 80 hr of hypoxic treatment was measured. Both in vivo (intraventricular administration of labeled precursors) and in vitro (tissue slices incubation) experiments were performed. The labeling of macromolecules extracted from the various subcellular fractions of the above-mentioned brain regions was also determined. After hypoxic treatment the incorporation of the labeled precursors into DNA, RNA, and proteins was impaired to a different extent in the three brain regions and in the various subcellular fractions examined; DNA and RNA labeling in cerebellar mitochondria and protein labeling in microsomes of the three brain regions examined were particularly affected.