Publication | Open Access
Protein synthesis in collagen lattice‐cultured fibroblasts is controlled at the ribosomal level
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Citations
13
References
1995
Year
Molecular BiologyCell CultureRibosomal Ribonucleic AcidCellular PhysiologyProtein SynthesisMatrix BiologyThree-dimensional LatticesRibosomal LevelGene ExpressionCell EngineeringCell BiologyProtein BiosynthesisFibroblast BiologyCollagen Lattice‐cultured FibroblastsPotential Ribosomal RegulationNatural SciencesSmall RnaMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Fibroblasts cultivated in three-dimensional lattices exhibit a large decrease of protein synthesis, mainly through transcriptional control. However, no previous work was devoted to a potential ribosomal regulation. We evaluated ribosomal ribonucleic acid (RNA) in monolayer- and collagen lattice-cultured fibroblasts. After one week of culture, total RNA was 60% lower in lattice-cultured fibroblasts than in monolayer-cultured cells. The decrease was identical for 18 S and 28 S rRNA subfractions. The half-life of RNA was much shorter in collagen lattice-cultured fibroblasts than in monolayers. These results suggest that protein synthesis in lattice-cultured fibroblasts is partly regulated at the ribosomal level.
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