The number of the nucleoli in a CaCo-2 cell nucleus does not generally depend on the quantity of DNA in the nucleus, but nucleolar DNA content is directly proportional to total nuclear DNA. However, in multinucleolar cells (three or more nucleoli), the nucleolar DNA content increases after 96 h incubation in culture without concomitant quantitative changes in nuclear DNA. The percentage of multinucleolar cells and the average number of nucleoli per nucleus increase with increasing incubation time. After 72 and 96 h in culture, multinucleolar cells show distinctive morphologies. The ratio of the sum of nucleolar perimeters to the nuclear perimeter increases linearly when the number of nucleoli in a nucleus increases, but there is no concomitant increase in total nucleolar area or DNA content, except in the 72 and 96 h populations. When the number of nucleoli in CaCo-2 cells increases after 48 and 60 h in culture, the amount of DNA per nucleolus decreases.
We have investigated differences between the actions of encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV) on cytometric indices in cultured NIH 3T3 and HEp-2 cells, which are characterized by different levels of transformation. HEp-2 cells surviving 48 h after EMCV infection showed lower nuclear ploidy, reduced nuclear area, fewer nucleoli and a higher percentage of euploid cells. There was a significant increase of nucleolar/nuclear DNA 6-24 h after EMCV infection. However, EMCV had markedly different effects on NIH 3T3 cells: there was a consistent increase in population ploidy, but the average number of nucleoli and the number of euploid cells in the population remained constant. The nucleolar/nuclear DNA ratio was almost unchanged. These different viral effects might be explained by the contrasting levels of differentiation of the cultured cell lines. The number of nucleoli does not depend on the amount of nuclear DNA in either viral-infected or intact cells but on the euploidy-to-aneuploidy ratio. The ratio of the sums of the nucleolar perimeters to the nuclear perimeter increases linearly with the number of nucleoli per nucleus in both intact and virus-infected cells. In both cell lines, the amount of DNA per nucleolus decreases as the number of nucleoli increases.
Reactions of continuous HeLa and RD cell cultures and their nuclear and nucleolar apparatus to addition of solcoseryl into the medium were studied. The monolayer density, proliferation activity, percentage of dead cells, RNA and DNA content in the nuclei and nucleoli, number of nucleoli in the nuclei, cell distribution in the population by the number of nucleoli in the nuclei, volume and complete surface area of the nuclei and nucleoli, and the nucleolar/nuclear ratio were evaluated. The cultures differently reacted to solcoseryl in the medium at the population and cellular levels of their organization. By the results of multiparametric analysis of the reactions of cells and their nuclear and nucleolar apparatus, solcoseryl can be referred to bioactive substances with characteristics of a factor regulating cell population growth.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.