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Biophysical Journal 1: 265-277 (1961)
© 1961 the Biophysical Society

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Radiation Inhibition of Amino Acid Uptake by Escherichia coli

E. S. Kempner and E. C. Pollard

ABSTRACT

The inhibition of macromolecular synthesis in Escherichia coli by ionizing radiation has been investigated. The survival of the ability to incorporate arginine, leucine, isoleucine, histidine, uracil, and glucose after various doses of gamma radiation, deuteron and alpha particle bombardment has been measured. All amino acids are incorporated by processes which show the same radiation sensitivity. The sensitivity of uracil corresponds to a volume which is roughly spherical, of radius about 160A, whereas the amino acids possess sensitive regions which are long and thin in character. The uptake of glucose is concerned with a smaller, roughly spherical unit. The possible identification of the radiation-sensitive targets with cellular constituents is discussed. The long thin character observed for amino acids suggests that the sensitive region affected by radiation is an unfolded form of a ribosome, or alternatively a long nucleic acid molecule. For uracil the sensitive region fits with a 70S ribosome, while for glucose a smaller particle would fit the data.




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E. C. Pollard, M. J. Ebert, C. Miller, K. Kolacz, and T. F. Barone
Ionizing Radiation: Effect of Irradiated Medium on Synthetic Processes
Science, February 26, 1965; 147(3661): 1045 - 1047.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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