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Gene Expression

Transcription and Processing of RNA from Mouse Ribosomal DNA Transfected into Hamster Cells

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Pages 1667-1671 | Received 07 Jun 1988, Accepted 03 Jan 1989, Published online: 31 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Transcription of mouse genes coding for rRNA in CHO cells was promoter dependent at levels 3 to 10% of that of endogenous rRNA synthesis. Northern (RNA) and S1 nuclease mapping analyses demonstrated that transcription proceeds through the entire gene segment coding for rRNA in transfected constructs and continues, at least in some cases, into the adjoining plasmid sequences. S1 nuclease mapping also detected some processing cleavages in the transcripts, including those at the 3′ terminus of 18S rRNA, those at the rapidly cleaved site at +650 in the external transcribed spacer, and those at a previously uncharacterized, rapidly cleaved site in the internal transcribed spacer. Deletion of sequences upstream or downstream from the promoter generally had no measurable effect on the level of transcription, but deletion of a 300-base-pair XhoI-XhoI fragment starting 1,287 base pairs from the transcription start site sharply increased the steady-state level of rRNA. Effects on processing were harder to test, because many intermediates are too unstable to detect even by S1 nuclease mapping; however, the data suggest that RNAs with deletions in the external transcribed spacer are processed poorly at distal sites. Processing at some sites may thus depend on interactions involving distant segments of rRNA.

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