학술논문

Rapid Inactivation of Ovalbumin Messenger Ribonucleic Acid after Acute Withdrawal of Estrogen
Document Type
Article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America; June 1974, Vol. 71 Issue: 6 p2357-2361, 5p
Subject
Language
ISSN
00278424; 10916490
Abstract
Synthesis of ovalbumin mRNA is induced and maintained in the avian oviduct by estrogen. When estrogen is rapidly removed from circulation, there is a general involution of the oviduct and an unusually rapid decay of ovalbumin mRNA activity. The kinetics of ovalbumin mRNA decay were not first order; instead, the rate of degradation increased about 10-fold over a 20-hr period after removal of estrogen. These results are in contrast with first-order decay kinetics observed for ovalbumin mRNA in estrogen-stimulated chicks (t1/2= about 24 hr) and in cell-free extracts. The degradative response triggered by hormonal withdrawal becomes more rapid between 1 and 4 days of estrogen-stimulated growth. We conclude that in the process of inducing egg-white protein synthesis, estrogen produces a cellular environment in which the egg-white protein mRNAs are relatively stable; removal of estrogen initiates cellular catabolism in a manner that is not understood.