Imcorporation of Orotic Acid into Nucteotides and RNA in Mouse Organs during 60 Minutes

Abstract
Mouse kidney and liver were found to increase their levels of radioactivity above that of serum from 2 to 60 min after administration of [6-14C]orotic acid. In spleen, thymus and brain, the radioactivity level reached a maximum soon after the injection and then decreased, as did that in serum. Sixty minutes after the injection, 44% of the administered isotope dose was found in the kidneys, 22% in the liver and 0.75% in the spleen. The 14C activity in liver UTP increased rapidly and then remained constant for 60 min. The ratio between the activities in uridine phosphates and UDP-sugars was 3:4 from 10- 60 min after injection. In the liver and kidneys, the RNA 14C activities at 60 min after injection were 15% of the activity in their acid-soluble fractions. Intraperitoneal administration was found to be preferable to intravenous administration for studies on nucleotides and RNA in mouse liver, due to the delayed incorporation of the [14C]orotic acid activity into the nucleotide pool.