The cycling characteristics of human peripheral blood lymphocytes in phytohemagglutinin-stimulated cultures were examined by means of a new technique employing radioautographic methods which assay the fraction of cells whose nuclei contain DNA polymerase utilizing exogenous and/or endogenous DNA primer-template capability. The fraction of cells labeled by these techniques increases 5-11 hr prior to the onset of DNA synthesis. Estimates of cell cycle time, G1 time, and fraction of cycling cells are made for the first 4 days in culture. Evidence is presented to support the hypothesis that daughter cells of the first divisions may be retired from cycle by virtue of loss of primer-template availability, rather than by loss of DNA polymerase.

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