INITIATION OF MITOSIS IN RELATION TO THE CELL CYCLE FOLLOWING FEEDING OF STARVED CHICKENS
Open Access
- 1 May 1964
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 21 (2), 169-174
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.21.2.169
Abstract
Cellular proliferation of newly hatched chickens was depressed by starving them for 2.5 to 3.5 days. Starvation may hold proliferative cells in different parts of the cell cycle. In order to find where in the cell cycle these cells are held, the animals were fed and the following events were measured as a function of time after the start of feeding (1) the mitotic index, and (2) the DNA synthetic index (number of cells in DNA synthesis 1 hour after injection of H3-thymidine). The duration of the cell''s DNA synthetic period (S) was measured, permitting a more exact description of the cell cycle. Analysis of the duodenal and esophageal epithelia shows that feeding initiates cell division by stimulating cells from the G1 part of the mitotic cycle in the duodenum. In the esophagus some of the cells were either stopped or slowed down in G1, and another group of cells in G2. Feeding simultaneously stimulates both cell groups; the former moves into S, the latter into mitosis. The S period in starved animals is a little longer than that in normally fed animals but the extension can be attributed to a slightly decreased body temperature.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- EVIDENCE FOR AN ESSENTIALLY CONSTANT DURATION OF DNA SYNTHESIS IN RENEWING EPITHELIA OF THE ADULT MOUSEThe Journal of cell biology, 1963
- Regional differences in cell generation time in growing rat tibiaeExperimental Cell Research, 1962
- Initiation of mitosis in relation to the cell division cycleExperimental Cell Research, 1962
- A propagated stimulation of DNA synthesis and cell divisionExperimental Cell Research, 1961
- Stress and adrenaline in relation to the diurnal cycle of epidermal mitotic activity in adult male miceProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1961
- STIMULATION OF DNA SYNTHESIS AND MITOSIS BY INJURY*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1960
- Cell population kinetics in the intestinal epithelium of the mouseExperimental Cell Research, 1959
- Preparation of Coated Radioautographs by Dipping Sections in Fluid Emulsion.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1957
- Mitotic activity in the liver of the mouse during inanition followed by refeeding with different levels of proteinJournal of Anatomy, 1949