Cytoplasmic and polysomal polyadenylated mRNA [poly(A)+-mRNA] increased by 120% prior to the onset of DNA synthesis during the regeneration of rat liver following partial hepatectomy. Despite this large change in cytoplasmic mRNA and an approximately 50% increase in total nuclear RNA, the amount of polyadenylated nuclear RNA increased by only 15--20% during this time. Neither the average size of nuclear or of cytoplasmic polyadenylated mRNA nor the length of their poly(adenylic acid) [poly(A)] tracts changed during liver regeneration. Polysomal poly-(A)+-mRNA increased proportionately more and at a faster rate than rRNA during the first day following partial hepatectomy. Normal livers contained a substantial proportion of cytoplasmic poly(A)+-mRNA not associated with polysomes but this proportion was not altered in 3-h regenerating liver. Thus, in regenerating liver, most preexisting cytoplasmic mRNA does not appear to be recruited into polysomes prior to the substantial increase in the amount of cytoplasmic poly(A)+-mRNA.
Rats maintained on a protein-free diet for 3 days have an altered time course of hepatic DNA synthesis during liver regeneration. The delay in DNA synthesis is eliminated by the administration of casein hydrolysate (given as late as 6h after partial hepatectomy), but not by glucose or incomplete amino acid mixtures. Despite the change in the timing of DNA synthesis, the increases in hepatic amino acid pools, which take place at the earliest stages of the regenerative process, occur in a normal pattern in the regenerating liver of rats fed the protein-free diet. Protein-deprived rats have increased protein synthesis and decreased rates of protein degradation in the liver in response to partial hepatectomy, but these adaptations do not prevent a lag in protein accumulation and low protein/RNA ratios. The regenerating livers of these animals show a deficit in the accumulation of cytoplasmic polyadenylated mRNA as well as a smaller proportion of free polyribosomes. It is suggested that the deficit in free polyribosomes found in the regenerating liver of protein-deprived rats might be a consequence of the slow accumulation of mRNA species coding for intracellular proteins.
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