Protein synthesis in germinating Saccharomyces cerevisiae ascospores

1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 345-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Armstrong ◽  
Thomas P. West ◽  
Paul T. Magee

The uptake and incorporation of macromolecular precursors in germinating Saccharomyces cerevisiae ascospores were investigated. Addition of cycloheximide at various times during germination revealed that protein synthesis can occur within 20 min after the spores are shifted to glucose-containing media. The time of initiation of uptake and incorporation of several amino acids differed; this can be attributed to differing amino acid pool levels in the spores, as well as differing transport activities. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of proteins labeled with [35S]methionine for various 20-min periods after germination began showed at least one protein whose synthesis begins well after the bulk of the proteins.

1976 ◽  
Vol 154 (2) ◽  
pp. 359-370 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian K. Speake ◽  
Raymond Dils ◽  
R. John Mayer

1. Explants of mammary gland from mid-pregnant rabbits were cultured in Medium 199 containing combinations of insulin, prolactin and cortisol. With hormone combinations which included prolactin, a sustained increase in the apparent rate of synthesis and in the amount of fatty acid synthetase was measurable immunologically. Maximum increase was produced with insulin, prolactin and cortisol present together. 2. With prolactin present alone, synthetase activity in the explants decreased to undetectable values after 1 day in culture, whereas the incorporation of l-[U-14C]leucine into immunodetectable material increased. Prolactin may therefore direct the synthesis of immunologically cross-reactive precursors of fatty acid synthetase which are enzymically inactive. 3. Culture with dibutyryl cyclic AMP plus theophylline in the presence of insulin, prolactin and cortisol delayed the increase in the rate of synthesis and accumulation of the synthetase. These compounds may also prevent the apparent decrease in the rate of degradation of the synthetase which occurs on day 2 of culture. 4. A large decrease in the apparent rate of degradation of the synthetase on day 2 of culture occurs during culture with hormone combinations which include prolactin. The protein obtained by centrifugation of explant homogenates for 6min at 14000gav. is degraded continuously throughout the culture period. 5. This decrease in the apparent rate of degradation of the synthetase was measured by radio-immunological precipitation. It is probably part of a regulated programme of enzyme degradation and not a reflexion of the reutilization of radioactive amino acids for the following reasons. (a) The calculated increase in the amount of the synthetase in explants on day 2 of culture with insulin, prolactin and cortisol was approximately equal to the measured increase of the enzyme complex which accumulates in the explants. This suggests little or no enzyme degradation has occurred. (b) Explants were cultured for 24h with insulin, prolactin and cortisol. They were then incubated with l-[U-14C]leucine, washed and incubated again for up to 4½h. l-[U-14C]Leucine rapidly equilibrated with the intracellular amino acid pool. Within 10min of incubation after washing explants to remove endogenous l-[U-14C]leucine the previously linear incorporation of l-[U-14C]-leucine into total explant protein ceased. This suggests that protein is synthesized from an amino acid pool which rapidly equilibrates with amino acids in the culture medium. (c) Explants were cultured for 24h as described in (b) but after washing they were cultured with insulin, prolactin and cortisol for 24h. Approx. 90% of the radioactivity lost from the ‘free’ intracellular amino acid pool and from amino acids derived from the degradation of explant protein in this period was detected in the culture medium. This suggests that the ‘free’ intracellular amino acids and amino acids derived from protein degradation can equilibrate with amino acids in the medium. A residual ‘free’ radioactive amino acid pool was present in the tissue. (d) Casein represents approx. 20% of the protein synthesized after 1 day in culture with insulin, prolactin and cortisol. Histological evidence suggests that on day 2 of culture, casein is unlikely to be degraded in the tissue. No increase in the radioactivity incorporated into casein can be measured in the 23h after incubation of explants with l-[U-14C]leucine as described in (b). This suggests that the incorporation of radioactivity into proteins during culture after incubation with l-[U-14C]leucine is minimal. (e) Inhibition of protein synthesis in explants by cycloheximide after incubation with l-[U-14C]leucine does not reveal a latent continuous degradation of fatty acid synthetase on day 2 of culture which might have been masked by the high rates of protein synthesis and therefore the accumulation of the enzyme. 6. The conclusion is discussed that there is a real decrease (or even cessation) in the rate of degradation of fatty acid synthetase during the period when the enzyme accumulates in explants cultured with hormone combinations which contain prolactin.


Development ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. 241-260
Author(s):  
J. M. W. Slack

A study has been made of limb regeneration in the axolotl using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of proteins labelled with [35S]methionine. In the early stages of regeneration seven proteins are identified which are-specific to the mesenchyme and thirteen which are specific to the epidermis. There is very little change in the gel pattern until the onset of overt cytodifferentiation upon which the muscle and cartilage become substantially different both from each other and from the blastemal mesenchyme. The gel pattern of mesenchyme from the larval limb bud is almost identical to that of the blastemal mesenchyme, while the pattern of the limb-bud epidermis differs somewhat from the blastemal epidermis. A careful search has been made for differences which might be associated with ‘positional information’ by comparing forelimb with hindlimb, proximal with distal and anterior with posterior. The differences which have been found are all associated with differences in visible cellular composition or in rates of differentiation, rather than with position per se.It is concluded that positional codings cannot be detected by this technique. On the basis of biological experiments, six criteria are proposed by which to assess future searches for positional codings.


1996 ◽  
pp. 203-219
Author(s):  
Chung Lee ◽  
Yi Qian ◽  
Julia A. Sensibar ◽  
Harold H. Harrison

2005 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helena Lindmark-Månsson ◽  
Anna Timgren ◽  
Gun Aldén ◽  
Marie Paulsson

1981 ◽  
Vol 91 (2) ◽  
pp. 352-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
TW McKeithan ◽  
JL Rosenbaum

The alga polytomella contains several organelles composed of microtubules, including four flagella and hundreds of cytoskeletal microtubules. Brown and co-workers have shown (1976. J. Cell Biol. 69:6-125; 1978, Exp. Cell Res. 117: 313-324) that the flagella could be removed and the cytoskeletans dissociated, and that both structures could partially regenerate in the absence of protein synthesis. Because of this, and because both the flagella and the cytoskeletons can be isolated intact, this organism is particularly suitable for studying tubulin heterogeneity and the incorporation of specific tubulins into different microtubule-containing organelles in the same cell. In order to define the different species of tubulin in polytonella cytoplasm, a (35)S- labeled cytoplasmic fraction was subjected to two cycles of assembly and disassembly in the presence of unlabeled brain tubulin. Comparison of the labeled polytomella cytoplasmic tubulin obtained by this procedure with the tubulin of isolated polytomella flagella by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis showed that, whereas the β-tubulin from both cytoplasmic and flagellar tubulin samples comigrated, the two α-tubulins had distinctly different isoelectic points. As a second method of isolating tubulin from the cytoplasm, cells were gently lysed with detergent and intact cytoskeletons obtained. When these cytoskeletons were exposed to cold temperature, the proteins that were released were found to be highly enriched in tubulin; this tubulin, by itself, could be assembled into microtubules in vitro. The predominant α-tubulin of this in vitro- assembled cytoskeletal tubulin corresponded to the major cytoplasmic α-tubulin obtained by coassembly of labeled polytomella cytoplasmic extract with brain tubulin and was quite distinct from the α-tubulin of purified flagella. These results clearly show that two different microtubule-containing organelles from the same cell are composed of distinct tubulins.


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