23 results on '"Eva Eliasson"'
Search Results
2. Att undervisa för utveckling av yrkeskunnande i vård och omsorg [Teaching for development of vocational knowledge in health care]
- Author
-
Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
lcsh:LC8-6691 ,didactic principles ,lcsh:Special aspects of education ,vocational knowledge ,Health care didactics ,sociocultural perspective ,nursing assistants - Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine didactic principles in health care teachers' description of their teaching practices, and how these principles were intertwined with vocational knowledge. In addition, characteristics of a health-care didactical approach were explored. Theoretical framework was based on Vygotsky's sociocultural perspective and Lave and Wenger's situated learning. 17 health-care teachers, working with adolescents or adults, were interviewed. The findings showed that vocational knowledge and didactic principles were often intimately intertwined. Didactic principles were dialogicity, work-links, variation, relational environment and language development. The healthcare didactical approach highlighted the development of students, both as health-care givers and as persons, through interactions with teachers and peers, and the teachers acted as boundary-crossing role models. The health-care didactical approach also involved the students' language development. Issues that need to be reflected on are if the emphasis on feminine-coded vocational knowledge is too strong in relation to the programme objectives, and if reading and writing as teaching forms are too marginalised.
- Published
- 2019
3. Health and social care teachers’ descriptions of challenges in their teaching at upper secondary school
- Author
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Helena Rehn and Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
lcsh:LC8-6691 ,Secondary level ,lcsh:Special aspects of education ,Pedagogy ,05 social sciences ,Pedagogik ,Ethnic group ,050301 education ,challenges ,cultural aspects ,Personality psychology ,social status ,Vocational education ,Political science ,0502 economics and business ,ethnicity ,Social care ,0503 education ,050203 business & management ,Social status - Abstract
Since vocational teachers not only mediate theoretical and practical knowledge, but also ideals concerning the professionals’ personalities and actions, the aim of this study is to analyse if and how these ideals influence the highlighted challenges of teaching. The study is drawing on a social constructionist perspective; the method used involves 17 qualitative interviews. The challenges mentioned were as follows: lack of motivation, language and cultural factors, low status of the occupation and plagiarism. Underlying ideals rooted in the health care sector were that students should become a carer because of an inner desire. Moral and ethical values were other ideals that underpinned themes such as dealing with plagiarism and the problems experienced with non-native Swedes. An underlying fact is also the low traditional status of the nursing assistants, a challenge the teachers try to handle without effective tools. In the order to understand the challenges and handle them, the teachers construct categories of differences. This is visible when the categorisation of students is made based on motivation and ethnicity. The findings highlight the importance of courses in vocational training that focus on understanding various norms and categorisations.
- Published
- 2017
4. Caring disposition and subordination. Swedish health and social care teachers’ conceptions of important vocational knowledge
- Author
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Eva Eliasson and Helena Rehn
- Subjects
Subordination (finance) ,Vocational education ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pedagogy ,Health education ,Empathy ,Social care ,Disposition ,Social class ,Psychology ,Education ,Qualitative research ,media_common - Abstract
Based on the increasing demands for vocational training in upper secondary school to adapt to workplace conditions, the aim of this article is to explore vocational teachers’ conceptions regarding ...
- Published
- 2015
5. Adaptation and Resistance – Response to state governance in a local Swedish knowledge culture
- Author
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Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
Harmony (color) ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Corporate governance ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,Public relations ,Curriculum theory ,Teacher education ,Education ,Archival science ,Political science ,Ideology ,Social science ,business ,Adaptation (computer science) ,media_common - Abstract
The aim of this article is to illuminate and discuss the relationship between state governance and local Swedish knowledge culture from 1958 to 1999. The main questions are: How do conceptions of knowledge and learning in a local teacher education culture relate to state governance, and how can adaptation and resistance be understood? The overall perspective is one of curriculum theory and the methods used are archival studies and interviews. The concepts of strategy and ideology are used and found helpful for understanding adaptation and resistance in the knowledge culture under study. Adaptation occurred when local ideological standpoints were in harmony with state governance and there were no strategic losses for the culture as a whole.
- Published
- 2013
6. Arginase in Chang's Liver Cells
- Author
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Gunilla Larsson, George Bölcsföldi, Eva Eliasson, Curt R. Enzell, Jan Rosenblom, and Bengt Mannervik
- Subjects
Cell Nucleus ,Electrophoresis ,Ornithine ,Chromatography ,Manganese ,Arginase ,Chemistry ,Lysine ,General Chemical Engineering ,Mitochondria, Liver ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Molecular biology ,Stimulation, Chemical ,Cell Line ,Enzyme Activation ,Agar ,Kinetics ,Fetus ,Liver ,Depression, Chemical ,Methods ,Humans ,Carbon Radioisotopes - Published
- 1974
7. CORRELATION BETWEEN CELL SIZE AND POSITION WITHIN THE DIVISION CYCLE IN SUSPENSION CULTURES OF CHANG LIVER CELLS
- Author
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E. Eliasson, S. Skog, and Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
Period (gene) ,Regeneration (biology) ,Cell ,Cell Count ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Fractionation ,Cell cycle ,Division (mathematics) ,Biology ,Models, Biological ,Cell Line ,Cell biology ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,chemistry ,Exponential growth ,medicine ,Animals ,Cell Division ,Mathematics ,DNA - Abstract
Chang liver cells from exponentially growing suspension cultures have been separated by sedimentation at unit gravity. Determinations of the protein content per cell showed that the fractionation procedure resulted in good separation of cells of different size. On the other hand, the DNA content of individual cells from the fractions, as determined cytofluorimetrically, indicated considerable heterogeneity in the size of cells from the same stage of the division cycle. On the basis of earlier results on intermitotic growth and the variation in the length of the cell cycle in homogeneous cell populations, a mathematical model has been constructed and tested using a computer program. The present results on the size distribution of cells from the different stages of the mitotic cycle are consistent with a regeneration of size heterogeneity in each cell generation, as a result of the dispersion of intermitotic times. The variation in cell cycle times may be related to a probabilistic event in the G1 period. In the mathematical model it was necessary to include a mechanism by which the regeneration of abnormally large cells is prevented. The experimental data are compatible with a gradually increasing inhibition of growth in cells larger than a certain size (circa 400 pg protein per cell).
- Published
- 1979
8. Numerical Resolution of CCD-Curves
- Author
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Göran Blomquist, Svante Wold, Eva Eliasson, Curt R. Enzell, Jan Rosenblom, and Bengt Mannervik
- Subjects
L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ,Computers ,Swine ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Numerical resolution ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Models, Biological ,Isoenzymes ,Optics ,Liver ,Phosphopyruvate Hydratase ,Methods ,Animals ,business ,Countercurrent Distribution - Published
- 1974
9. RNA metabolism in human cells during amino acid deprivation
- Author
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Eva Eliasson and George Bölcsföldi
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,RNA ,Biology ,Ribosomal RNA ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,Molecular biology ,Amino acid ,Glutamine ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Cytoplasm ,Transfer RNA ,Protein biosynthesis ,Leucine - Abstract
The effects of amino acid deprivation on the rate of synthesis of cytoplasmic rRNA and tRNA, prepared by phenol extraction, were studied. Incubation of the cells in a glutamine or leucine free medium resulted in a 60–90 % decrease in the rate of formation of rRNA. The rate of synthesis of tRNA was inhibited by 35–50 %. Restitution of the complete medium also had characteristically different effects on the two species of RNA. After addition of the missing amino acid, the rate of synthesis of rRNA increased, following a lag period of about 1 h. On the other hand, the rate of synthesis of tRNA exhibited a marked decrease during the first hours of nutritional restitution and a longer lag period, prior to the expected acceleration. Therefore, the effect of nutritional shifts on the synthesis of tRNA and rRNA was non-coordinate. The results are discussed with reference to different regulatory mechanisms for protein synthesis in eu- and prokaryote cells.
- Published
- 1972
10. Ornithine δ-Transaminase Activity During the Growth Cycle of Chang's Liver Cells
- Author
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Harold J. Strecker and Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Arginine ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Ornithine ,Biochemistry ,Amino acid ,Glutamine ,Arginase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Valine ,Leucine ,Molecular Biology ,Essential amino acid - Abstract
During the normal 4-day growth cycle of Chang's liver cells in tissue culture, ornithine δ-transaminase increased and returned to the initial level in a fairly regular and reproducible manner. These changes in activity appeared to be the net result of synthesis and degradation of enzyme. Synthesis of enzyme was prevented or decreased by omitting as essential amino acid from the medium or by the addition of puromycin. Inhibition of synthesis allowed a minimum degradation rate to be determined. Synthesis of enzyme began again when the missing amino acid was restored. If the missing amino acid was glutamine or phenylalanine, the subsequent rise of ornithine δ-transaminase took place as a single continuous stage after transferring the cells to complete medium. In contrast, when arginine was the amino acid omitted from the preceding incubation medium, the subsequent increase of enzymatic activity was biphasic. The addition of actinomycin either initially or after prior incubation of cells in medium lacking an essential amino acid stimulated the first phase rise; the second phase increase then was not observed. Leucine, valine, isoleucine, or ornithine, each of which is inhibitory to ornithine δ-transaminase, increased enzymatic activity when added at a 6 mm concentration and extended the period of normal increase of the enzyme. Other amino acids were without effect. It is proposed that the biosynthesis of ornithine δ-transaminase in Chang's liver cells is repressed by an as yet unidentified metabolic product. In addition, it is suggested that the enzyme is synthesized in response to messenger ribonucleic acid of an appreciable lifetime.
- Published
- 1966
11. REVERSIBLE CHANGES IN THE ULTRASTRUCTURE OF CHANG LIVER CELL MITOCHONDRIA FOLLOWING INCUBATION OF THE CELLS IN A GLUTAMINE-DEFICIENT MEDIUM
- Author
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Myra Jagendorf-Elfvin and Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
Glutamine ,Liver cell ,Mitochondria, Liver ,Cell Biology ,Mitochondrion ,Biology ,Brief Notes ,Article ,Cell Line ,Culture Media ,Cell biology ,Microscopy, Electron ,Liver ,Biochemistry ,Cell culture ,Culture Techniques ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Protein biosynthesis ,Ultrastructure ,Humans ,Incubation - Published
- 1969
12. Arginase in young chick embryos
- Author
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Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Enzyme regulation ,animal structures ,Arginine ,Enzyme protein ,Embryogenesis ,Embryo ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Chick embryos ,Embryonic stem cell ,Enzyme Repression ,Arginase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Enzyme ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,embryonic structures ,Urea ,Enzyme synthesis ,Psychological repression ,Specific enzyme - Abstract
Experiments have been carried out to study the fine structure of the development of arginase in the young chick embryo. Considerable periodic fluctuations were found in the speed of accumulation of the enzyme. The results suggest that enzyme synthesis may be regulated by a feedback control. It is tempting to investigate whether enzyme repression, the feedback mechanism which seems to play an important part in the regulation of enzyme synthesis in microorganisms, may not also be of importance in the changes in the enzyme pattern of the embryonic cells that are characteristic of early embryonic development. Studies along this line of thinking are in progress.
- Published
- 1962
13. Arginase Activity during the Growth Cycle of Chang's Liver Cells
- Author
-
Eva Eliasson and Harold J. Strecker
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Growth medium ,Arginine ,Protein turnover ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Ornithine ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Amino acid ,Arginase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Citrulline ,Leucine ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
An increase of arginase activity has been produced in Chang's liver cells in suspension cultures by increasing the concentration in the growth medium of lysine, leucine, valine, or ornithine. These amino acids are known to inhibit enzymes in the arginase-initiated reaction sequence from arginine to proline. An increase in arginase also occurred with o-aminobenzaldehyde, a compound which reacts with a metabolite (Δ1-pyrroline 5-carboxylate) of the same reaction chain. A stimulation of arginase has been also shown following substitution of citrulline for arginine in the growth medium. A decrease in arginase was found after addition of proline, a product of the same reaction sequence. Experiments in which protein synthesis was inhibited by puromycin indicate that the rate of accumulation of enzyme protein was involved rather than an activation or inactivation of preformed enzyme. When arginase was stabilized by the addition of manganese to the growth medium, the compounds mentioned above produced the same results as before, although greater in magnitude, indicating an effect on the rate of synthesis rather than on the rate of degradation of the enzyme during general protein turnover. These results suggest that synthesis of arginase in Chang's liver cells during a normal 4-day growth cycle is regulated, in part at least, by product repression.
- Published
- 1966
14. REVERSIBLE DEGRADATION OF POLYRIBOSOMES IN CHANG CELLS CULTURED IN A GLUTAMINE-DEFICIENT MEDIUM
- Author
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Tore Hultin, Eva Eliasson, and G. Eric Bauer
- Subjects
Glutamine ,Phenylalanine ,Biology ,Ribosome ,Article ,Cell-free system ,Nucleic acid metabolism ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Leucine ,Culture Techniques ,Centrifugation, Density Gradient ,medicine ,Protein biosynthesis ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Amino Acids ,Uridine ,Carbon Isotopes ,Messenger RNA ,Dactinomycin ,RNA ,Cell Biology ,Culture Media ,Liver ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Ribosomes ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The effects of temporary glutamine deficiency on the protein and nucleic acid metabolism of Chang's liver cells in suspension cultures have been studied. It was observed that cells maintained in a glutamine-free medium showed a reduced incorporation of labeled precursors into protein and RNA. At the same time, the activity of the ribosomes and the proportion of polyribosomal aggregates in cell extracts diminished. These effects were reversed when the glutamine content of the medium was restored. The restoration of a normal rate of amino acid incorporation by intact cells as well as by cell-free systems was time dependent, and took place within a few hours after glutamine addition without preceding increase in the prevailing low rate of RNA synthesis. The addition of actinomycin D at concentrations that strongly inhibited the RNA metabolism of the cells did not prevent the increase in protein synthesis or the reappearance of polyribosomal aggregates. These facts suggest that the restoration of protein synthesis in the cells after glutamine starvation was not dependent on a production of new messenger RNA. The experimental data are consistent with the hypothesis that previously synthesized messenger RNA, preserved in the cells in a stable form, was brought into action in response to the reestablishment of an adequate cellular environment.
- Published
- 1967
15. Automatic collection of samples from suspension cell cultures for investigations of prolonged metabolic processes
- Author
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Eva Eliasson and George Bölcsföldi
- Subjects
Autoanalysis ,Chromatography ,Arginase ,Chemistry ,Temperature ,Biophysics ,Proteins ,Cell Count ,Cell Biology ,Tritium ,Biochemistry ,Specimen Handling ,Kinetics ,Liver ,Evaluation Studies as Topic ,Cell culture ,Culture Techniques ,Methods ,Urea ,Suspension (vehicle) ,Molecular Biology ,Cell Division ,Cells, Cultured ,Thymidine - Published
- 1973
16. Chapter 14 Automatic Collection of Samples from Suspension Cell Cultures for Investigation of Prolonged Metabolic Processes
- Author
-
George Bölcsföldi and Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
Chromatography ,Cell culture ,Biology ,Cell biology ,Suspension (chemistry) - Abstract
Publisher Summary Studies concerned with the kinetics of metabolic processes having a prolonged duration place certain demands on the sampling procedure, which may be difficult to handle practically. For example, investigating the pattern of synthesis of metabolites during the cell cycle necessitates the collection of samples from synchronized cell cultures at regular, frequent intervals over periods of one or more days in order to yield coherent results. The apparatus described here is assembled to facilitate the collection of samples at frequent, regular intervals, from cell cultures during experiments having duration of several days. For this technique to be of use in monitoring the progress of cellular processes, it is necessary to establish that the cell samples stored in the cold, and analyzed later, give the same results as samples freshly collected at these time points. Obviously, such control experiments have to be carried out for each individual type of experiment to ascertain whether the metabolites to be assayed are stable under the storage conditions used.
- Published
- 1976
17. Control of transfer RNA synthesis in the presence of inhibitors of protein synthesis
- Author
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George Bölcsföldi, Ulla-Britt Westerberg, and Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
Transcription, Genetic ,Emetine ,Trichodermin ,Peptide Chain Elongation, Translational ,Cycloheximide ,Biology ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,RNA, Transfer ,Polysome ,Protein biosynthesis ,medicine ,Peptide Chain Initiation, Translational ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Molecular Weight ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Liver ,Puromycin ,Polyribosomes ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Transfer RNA ,Elongation ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The rate of synthesis of transfer RNA in suspension cultures of Chang's liver cells, has been examined in the presence of various inhibitors of protein synthesis with different modes of action. Inhibitors of polypeptide chain elongation such as cycloheximide and emetine stimulated the rate of synthesis of transfer RNA at concentrations that inhibited protein synthesis by 60–90%. Trichodermin, an inhibitor of the elongation and termination steps in protein synthesis, had an effect similar to that of cycloheximide and emetine. On the other hand verrucarin, an inhibitor of initiation, and puromycin, an analogue of the aminoacyl terminus of tRNA, had little effect on the synthesis of transfer RNA at low concentrations. At high concentrations these compounds inhibited transfer RNA synthesis. Inhibitors of protein synthesis can be divided in two groups based on their effect on the polysom pattern. The first group increased the number of large polysomes, while verrucarin and puromycin lead to a break down of large polysomes and to an accumulation of monosomes and small polysomes. Thus, there appears to be a correlation between the effect of these inhibitors of protein synthesis on the aggregational state of the polysomes and their effect on the rate of transfer RNA synthesis.
- Published
- 1976
18. ChemInform Abstract: ARGINASE IN CHANG′S LIVER CELLS
- Author
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GUNILLA LARSSON, GEORGE BOELCSFOELDI, and EVA ELIASSON
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1974
19. Arginase, an S-phase enzyme in a human cell line
- Author
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Sven Skog, Viola Eriksson, and Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
DNA Replication ,Glutamine ,Biophysics ,Cycloheximide ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Humans ,Urea ,Molecular Biology ,Interphase ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Arginase ,Cell Cycle ,Cell cycle ,Molecular biology ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Liver ,Cell culture ,Urea cycle ,Thymidine - Abstract
Suspension cultures of 'Chang liver' cells were synchronized by preincubation in a glutamine-deficient medium or by thymidine blockade. Specific arginase activity varied in the synchronized cultures, being high when the number of S-phase cells was maximal. A relationship between high arginase activity and a high percentage of (S + G2) cells was also found when unsynchronized cells were separated by velocity sedimentation. The increase in arginase activity near the G2/S border was totally inhibited in the presence of cycloheximide. The rate of decrease in activity after addition of the drug indicated that the variations in arginase activity during the mitotic cycle were the result of variations in the rate of synthesis of the enzyme, while the rate of degradation was more or less constant, corresponding to 4--6% per h. The role of arginase in cells lacking a urea cycle and the regulation of arginase activity in 'Chang liver' cells is discussed.
- Published
- 1981
20. REGULATION OF ARGINASE ACTIVITY IN CHANG'S LIVER CELLS IN TISSUE CULTURE
- Author
-
Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
Arginine ,Biophysics ,Catabolite repression ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Enzyme Repression ,Tissue Culture Techniques ,Tissue culture ,Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Pharmacology ,Arginase ,Research ,Succinates ,Metabolism ,Carbohydrate ,Enzyme ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Liver ,Research Design ,Hepatocytes - Abstract
The effects have been investigated of variations in the nutrient medium on the arginase ( l -arginine ureohydrolase, EC 3.5.3.1) activity of Chang's liver cells in tissue culture. Glucose is found to depress the arginase activity. Succinate as an additional carbohydrate source seems to enhance the effect of glucose. Cells grown in a medium with a low concentration of glucose have an arginase activity which depends on the concentration of arginine in the medium. In the discussion of the experimental results, several possible mechanisms which might be involved in the regulation of arginase activity have been examined. Among these are catabolite repression and substrate induction of synthesis of enzyme.
- Published
- 1965
21. RNA metabolism in human cells during amino acid deprivation. I
- Author
-
Lambert G. Poels, George Bölcsföldi, and Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Glutamine ,Biology ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,Cell Line ,Feedback ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Leucine ,Culture Techniques ,Protein biosynthesis ,Humans ,Uridine ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cell Nucleus ,Carbon Isotopes ,RNA ,Compartmentalization (fire protection) ,Amino acid ,Culture Media ,Kinetics ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Liver ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Specific activity - Abstract
1. 1. Uptake of uridine and incorporation into RNA were concentration dependent. Apparent Km for uridine uptake and incorporation into RNA was for normally growing cells 0.04 mM and for glutamine deficient cells 0.1–0.05 mM. 2. 2. Addition of uridine to the culture medium did not appreciably expand the acid-soluble pool labeled from externally added uridine. 3. 3. Uridine incorporation into RNA attained its maximal rate within a few minutes, at a time when the specific activity of the acid-soluble pool was comparatively low, indicating a compartmentalization of the pool. 4. 4. At saturating concentrations, uridine incorporation into RNA was linear for many hours, indicating a feedback regulation of uridine uptake into the nuclear precursor pool and a preferential reutilization of breakdown products of nuclear turnover RNA. The rate of incorporation into RNA of labeled uridine will therefore be proportional to the accumulation of “stable” species of RNA. 5. 5. Leucine and glutamine deprival gradually decreased RNA accumulation. 6. 6. After the addition of the missing amino acid to prestarved cultures there was a lag priod of about 3 h before any increase in RNA accumulation could be seen. Thus a complete restoration of protein synthesis preceded the increase in RNA accumulation.
- Published
- 1971
22. Repression of arginase synthesis in Chang liver cells
- Author
-
Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
Proline ,Repressor ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Leucine ,Culture Techniques ,Animals ,Horses ,RNA, Messenger ,Uridine ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Messenger RNA ,Growth medium ,Carbon Isotopes ,Manganese ,Arginase ,Translation (biology) ,Cell Biology ,Kinetics ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Liver ,Puromycin ,Dactinomycin ,RNA - Abstract
A rapid increase in specific arginase activity occurred in Chang liver cells immediately after addition of the missing nutrient to cells preincubated in a medium from which one essential amino acid had been omitted. The rapid change in enzymic activity offered an opportunity for studying specific enzyme regulation during short time experiments. 1. 1. The experimental results indicate that the increase in specific arginase activity, which could be immediately stopped by the addition of puromycin, was due to a synthesis of the enzyme more rapid than in normally growing cells. 2. 2. Actinomycin D at concentrations sufficient to inhibit DNA directed RNA synthesis did not prevent the increase in arginase activity, suggesting that the synthesis of the enzyme took place in response to a preformed stable messenger RNA. 3. 3. A few hours after the addition of the missing nutrient to a prestarved culture, arginase synthesis was again retarded. 3.1. (a) This decrease in the rate of enzyme formation could be prevented by addition of actinomycin D. The decrease in the rate of enzyme synthesis in absence of actinomycin, therefore, might not be due to a destruction of the specific messenger RNA, but rather to a depression of the rate at which the stable arginase messenger was translated. 3.2. (b) When proline was added to the culture medium the decrease in the rate of enzyme formation was enhanced. The experimental results suggest a regulation of arginase synthesis on the level of translation by means of an actinomycin sensitive repressor. The activity of this repressor seems to depend on the presence of a low molecular co-repressor, which accumulates in the cells in presence of proline. 4. 4. When proline was added to the deficient medium during the starvation period, the increase in arginase activity immediately after the addition of the missing nutrient was partially prevented. 4.1. (a) An increased rate of arginase formation was produced when these cells, prestarved in presence of proline, were transferred to a “normal” growth medium without added proline. 4.2. (b) This stimulation of arginase synthesis, brought about by the removal of proline, was not prevented by the addition of actinomycin D and therefore seemed not to be dependent of a formation of new messenger RNA. These results again suggest a proline dependent repression of arginase synthesis at the level of translation of a preformed, stable messenger RNA.
- Published
- 1967
23. Regulation of arginase activity in Chang liver cells in the absence of net protein synthesis
- Author
-
Eva Eliasson
- Subjects
Dactinomycin ,Arginine ,Arginase ,Proline ,Glutamine ,Biophysics ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Feedback ,Liver ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Protein biosynthesis ,medicine ,RNA, Messenger ,Molecular Biology ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1967
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