The synthesis of ovalbumin mRNA sequences was studied in isolated nuclei from hen oviduct. Two different methods of analysis were used to distinguish in vitro synthesized from preexisting mRNA sequences: (i) Mercurated ribonucleotides were used for in vitro RNA synthesis, and the newly synthesized RNA was purified by chromatography on sulfhydrylagarose and hybridized to radioactive ovalbumin cDNA. (ii) (3HJUTP was used to label the in vitro synthesized RNA. Hybridization to unlabeled mercurated cDNA, RNase A digestion, and subsequent purification of the hybrids on SH-agarose allowed the quantitation of newly synthesized ovalbumin mRNA sequences. Approximately 0.1% of the newly synthesized RNA was identified as ovalbumin RNA by both methods. The synthesis of ovalbumin RNA progressed during the incubation of nuclei and was sensitive to actinomycin D and low concentrations of a-amanitin. The preferential in vitro transcription of the ovalbumin gene (1000-fold over random transcription of the chicken genome) by RNA polymerase B (nucleosidetriphosphate:RNA nucleotidyltransferase, EC 2.7.7.6) suggests that the specificity of in vivo RNA synthesis is retained in isolated nuclei.The synthesis of the egg white proteins in the tubular gland cell of the chicken oviduct is primarily related to the cellular accumulation of the corresponding mRNAs (1-7). During stimulation with estradiol the amount of ovalbumin mRNA dramatically increases from a few copies to tens of thousands of copies per cell (2, 4, 5-7). Similar results have been found for the induction of ovomucoid and lysozyme mRNA (7). The steroid-mediated induction of specific mRNA molecules in the chicken oviduct may result from altered rates of synthesis and/or degradation. We therefore studied the synthesis rate of the egg white protein mRNAs. Because it was not possible to measure the rate of specific mRNA synthesis in the animals, we chose isolated oviduct nuclei as the cell-free system that might best reflect the transcriptional activity of the intact cell (8). The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U. S. C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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