1. Specific protein synthesis in cellular differentiation
- Author
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Arlene R. Wyman, William H. Petri, and Fotis C. Kafatos
- Subjects
Alanine ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cellular differentiation ,Vitelline membrane ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Oogenesis ,Epithelium ,Amino acid ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,embryonic structures ,medicine ,Eggshell ,Drosophila melanogaster ,Molecular Biology ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The eggshell of Drosophila melanogaster is composed of a set of proteins synthesized by the follicular epithelium during the last third of oogenesis and organized into an inner zone (vitelline membrane) and an outer zone (chorion). To study these proteins, the authors developed techniques for mass-isolating follicles of mixed stages, mature (stage 14) follicles, chorion from stage 14 follicles, and chorion and vitelline membrane from laid eggs. The eggshell is composed mainly of protein and is unusually rich in proline and alanine. Six proteins of the chorion have been identified on polyacrylamide gels. The program of synthesis of these proteins was studied by incubating follicles of different developmental stages in culture with 3 H-labeled amino acids and displaying the labeled proteins on gels with the aid of autofluorography. The proteins are synthesized in a specific overlapping sequence during stages 10–14, a period when chorion deposition is known to occur. In addition, putative vitelline membrane proteins have been identified by their preferential incorporation of [ 3 H]proline and [ 3 H]alanine during stages of active vitelline membrane synthesis.
- Published
- 1976