RESUMO
Cycloheximide (Cyh), administered at a dose of 5 mg/kg body wt blocks protein synthesis in normal rat liver (NRL) and regenerating rat liver (RRL). The rate of synthesis of 45S pre-rRNA in RRL, studied after RNA labelling in vivo is activated 2.8 times. Pre-r RNA synthesis in RRL is more sensitive to the stopped translation, but never falls down to the level in NRL. The major contribution to the rDNA transcription activation in RRL comes from the 20-fold increase in the number of pol I molecules engaged in the transcription, the elongation rate being 1.4-fold accelerated. Cyh quenches partially the enhanced rDNA transcription in RRL: the number of pol I molecules and their elongation rate are about 1.7-fold and 1.5-fold higher, respectively, than the corresponding values in NRL after Cyh treatment. The results show that two different mechanisms control the number and the rate of initiation and elongation of RNA polymerase I in rat liver; one of them depends on continuous protein synthesis and can be inactivated by Cyh, the other is Cyh resistant.