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A nucleoprotein of a vitrous consistency was extracted from the gonads of the coalfish (Gadus virens).
The preparation of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) from this nucleoprotein and from staphylococci is described. Both of these different kinds of DNA have been mixed with bovine serum albumin or cytochrom c respectively to produce solutions which subsequently were spread onto the Langmuir trough under defined conditions.
After transfer of aliquots from the surface monolayers to carbon support films the preparations were examined with the electron microscope. The micrographs show threads of various lengths, partly stretched, partly folded in loops, consisting of DNA molecules embedded in a protein envelope.
Measurements and calculations of 5900 particles of the complex of Gadus virens-DNA-Albumin, with relatively short threads show a distribution of discontinuous character. If length is plotted against number then it occurs that there are maxima of different lengths of threads. The abscissae of these maxima obey the ratio 1 : 2 : 4 : 8. This holds for longer threads too the maxima of which, however, have smaller ordinate values.
1. Electron micrographs of ultra-thin sections of Staphylococcus aureus and Micrococcus lysodeikticus in Vestopal as embedding medium disclose a multiplicity of DNA containing threads with varying interparticular distances.
2. The diameter of these threads is about one tenth of the average optimal section thickness.
3. This section thickness inevitably is implicated in the visualization of the internal distances between the threads as well as in some common trends in the DNA pool, a fact that has to be accounted for in the analysis of the macromolecules.
4. By spreading lysozyme protoplasts of M. lysodeikticus on a water-air interface in a Langmuir trough and by transferring this surface layer to carbon supported Formvar films, two-dimensional systems can be demonstrated which as a thread of constant width comprise the total DNA content of one microorganism each.
5. Such a macromolecular system shows equally shaped, coiled loops in a peripheral zone and many crossings towards the center. Branching of threads never has been observed so far.
From this evidence we conlude:
a) Intracellular DNA in these bacteria seems to exist in one pool as a “woolen ball” which is centered in the cytoplasm as a more or less dense object.
b) This “woolen ball“ embodies the total amount of DNA most probably as one single threadlike unit.
6. Partial destruction of the thread system of protoplasts will result upon changing optimal spreading conditions.
7. The same kind of destruction is shown upon isolation of the DNA from protoplasts, the length of the threads being an inverse function of the number of precipitation steps showing purification.
The ribonucleic acid of reovirus was extracted with 2 M sodium perchlorate solution and spread by the protein monolayer technique. Areas of the monolayer were transferred to support films, rotary shadowed, and observed in the electron microscope. Filaments of RNA obtained by extraction prior to spreading were similar in appearance and in distribution of contour lengths (0.2 to 1.2 μ) to those obtained by phenol extraction of the virus. Most of the filaments resulting from extraction of the virus suspension during spreading on a sodium perchlorate solution, however, were longer than 1 μ. The lengths of the longest filaments exceeded the 5 μ length predicted from chemical data for one single piece of complementary-stranded RNA in the reovirus particle.
The short filaments, 1.2 μ and less in length, fell into a tri-modal pattern of length distribution with peaks at 0.35 μ, 0.60 μ and 1.10 μ. These shorter lengths probably resulted from breakage of the intact RNA during the extraction procedures. The consistently observed pattern of length distribution suggests that they represent relatively stable subunits of the molecule.
Sodium perchlorate extracted reovirus RNA was thermally denatured in formaldehyde prior to spreading by the protein monolayer technique. Length distributions and relative numbers of filaments in the peaks of the tri-modal distribution pattern were similar to those found for unheated material when extracted prior to spreading. This similarity indicates that heating subsequent to extraction produced no further filament breakage. The thin, kinky appearance of the heated filaments, and the appearance of congruent pairs, indicated that heating had separated the strands of the complementary-stranded RNA subunits.