Journal
Article title
Authors
Content
Full texts:
Title variants
Changes in cell nuclei induced by heat shock
Languages of publication
Abstracts
Exposure of cells to hyperthermic temperatures (43° to 48°C) results in an increase of
the total protein mass which coisolates with the nuclei. Prominent physiological effect of heat-shock on nuclear structure is inhibition of DNA replication and repair, and also RNA
synthesis and processing. Heat-shock-induced p rotein mass increase has been shown to
correlate with ultrastructural changes and polypeptide composition of nuclear skeleton
- nuclear matrix.
the total protein mass which coisolates with the nuclei. Prominent physiological effect of heat-shock on nuclear structure is inhibition of DNA replication and repair, and also RNA
synthesis and processing. Heat-shock-induced p rotein mass increase has been shown to
correlate with ultrastructural changes and polypeptide composition of nuclear skeleton
- nuclear matrix.
Keywords
Publisher
Year
Volume
Physical description
Dates
published
1999
Contributors
References
Document Type
Publication order reference
Identifiers
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11089/14946
YADDA identifier
bwmeta1.element.hdl_11089_14946