The ability to cleave 28S ribosomal RNA during apoptosis is a cell-type dependent trait unrelated to DNA fragmentation

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Abstract

Discrete cleavages within 28S rRNA divergent domains have previously been found to coincide with DNA fragmentation during apoptosis. Here we show that rRNA and DNA cleavages can occur independently in apoptotic cells, i.e. that the previously observed correlation is likely to be coincidental. In HL-60 cells, apoptosis with massive DNA fragmentation could be induced without any signs of rRNA cleavage. The opposite situation; rRNA cleavage without concomitant internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, was found in okadaic acid-treated Molt-4 cells. Other leukemia cell lines underwent apoptosis either without (K562 and Molt-3) or with (U937) both forms of polynucleotide cleavage. In K562 cells transfected with a temperature-sensitive p53 mutant, internucleosomal DNA fragmentation but not 28S rRNA cleavage was inducible by wild-type p53 expression. The absence of apoptotic rRNA cleavage in some cell types suggests that this phenomenon is tightly regulated and unrelated to DNA fragmentation or a presumed scheme for general macromolecular degradation in apoptotic cells.

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APA

Samali, A., Gilje, B., Døskeland, S. O., Cotter, T. G., & Houge, G. (1997). The ability to cleave 28S ribosomal RNA during apoptosis is a cell-type dependent trait unrelated to DNA fragmentation. Cell Death and Differentiation, 4(4), 289–293. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.cdd.4400246

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