Japanese Journal of Cancer Research GANN
Print ISSN : 0910-5050
CASEIN AND HISTONE KINASES OF A RAT ASCITES HEPATOMA AS COMPARED WITH THOSE OF RAT LIVER
Kunimi KIKUCHIReiko HIRAIHiromi MITSUIYoshihiro KIUCHIShigeru TSUIKI
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1985 Volume 76 Issue 12 Pages 1154-1161

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Abstract

Seryl/threonyl-protein kinases in cytosolic and particulate fractions from rat liver and AH-13, a rat ascites hepatoma, have been studied by chromatographing these fractions on DEAE-cellulose and assaying the eluates with casein, phosvitin, histone and protamine as substrates. Liver cytosolic fraction contains a group of well-characterized seryl/threonyl-protein kinases, namely, casein kinases I and II and histone kinases I and II. Liver particulate fraction, on the other hand, is almost totally devoid of casein kinase I and histone kinase I but contains an additional peak of casein kinase tentatively designated casein kinase III. In AH-13, cytosolic casein kinase I is markedly increased and particulate-associated casein kinases II and III are moderately increased as compared with liver. Moreover, it was found that in AH-13, the histone kinase I level is high in the particulate fraction but markedly decreased in the cytosolic fraction. It is suggested that particulate-associated histone kinase I may be of cytosolic origin.

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© The Japanese Cancer Association
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