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Flagellar adhesion in chlamydomonas induces synthesis of two high molecular weight cell surface proteins

Because our previous studies (Snell, W.J., and W.S. Moore, 1980, J. Cell Biol. 84:203- 210) on the mating reaction of chlamydomonas reinhardtii showed that there was an adhesion-induced turnover of proteins whose synthesis is induced during aggregation. Analysis by SDS PAGE and autoradiography showe...

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Autores principales: Snell, WJ, Clausell, A, Moore, WS
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1983
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2112424/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6833372
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author Snell, WJ
Clausell, A
Moore, WS
author_facet Snell, WJ
Clausell, A
Moore, WS
author_sort Snell, WJ
collection PubMed
description Because our previous studies (Snell, W.J., and W.S. Moore, 1980, J. Cell Biol. 84:203- 210) on the mating reaction of chlamydomonas reinhardtii showed that there was an adhesion-induced turnover of proteins whose synthesis is induced during aggregation. Analysis by SDS PAGE and autoradiography showed that proteins of 220,000 M(r) and 165, 000 M(r) (designated A(1) and A(2) respectively) consistently showed a high rate of synthesis only in flagella or flagellar membrane-enriched fractions prepared from aggregating gametes. Since the two proteins were soluble in the non-ionic detergent NP-40 and were removed from intact cells by a brief pronase treatment, it is likely that A(1) and A(2) are membrane proteins expose on the cell surface. A(1) and A(2) were each synthesized by gametes of both mating types (mt(-) and mt(+)) and synthesis of these two proteins could be detected in the normal mating reaction (wild type mt(-) and mt(+)), in mixtures of mt(-) and impotent mt(+) gametes (which could aggregate but not fuse), and in mixtures of gametes of a single mating type with isolated flagella of the opposite mating type. Cells aggregating in tunicamycin, an inhibitor of protein glycosylation, lost their adhesiveness during aggregation and did not synthesize the 220,000 M(r) protein but instead produced a protein (possibly an underglycosylated form of A(1)) of slightly lower mol wt. The 220,000 and 165,000 M(R) proteins appeared to be flagellar proteins and not cell wall proteins because A(1) and A(2) did not co-migrate with previously identified cell wall proteins, and synthesis of the two proteins could not be detected in flagella-less (bald-2) mutant cells. Analysis of the adhesive activity of sucrose gradient fraction of detergent (octyl glucoside)-solubilized flagellar membranes revealed that fractions containing A(1) and A(2) did not have detectable adhesive activity. The possibility remains that A(1) and A(2) are adhesion molecules whose activity could not be measured in the assay we used. Alternatively, the 220,000 and 165,000 M(r) proteins may be inactivated adhesion molecules or else they may be flagellar surface proteins involved only indirectly in the adhesion process.
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spelling pubmed-21124242008-05-01 Flagellar adhesion in chlamydomonas induces synthesis of two high molecular weight cell surface proteins Snell, WJ Clausell, A Moore, WS J Cell Biol Articles Because our previous studies (Snell, W.J., and W.S. Moore, 1980, J. Cell Biol. 84:203- 210) on the mating reaction of chlamydomonas reinhardtii showed that there was an adhesion-induced turnover of proteins whose synthesis is induced during aggregation. Analysis by SDS PAGE and autoradiography showed that proteins of 220,000 M(r) and 165, 000 M(r) (designated A(1) and A(2) respectively) consistently showed a high rate of synthesis only in flagella or flagellar membrane-enriched fractions prepared from aggregating gametes. Since the two proteins were soluble in the non-ionic detergent NP-40 and were removed from intact cells by a brief pronase treatment, it is likely that A(1) and A(2) are membrane proteins expose on the cell surface. A(1) and A(2) were each synthesized by gametes of both mating types (mt(-) and mt(+)) and synthesis of these two proteins could be detected in the normal mating reaction (wild type mt(-) and mt(+)), in mixtures of mt(-) and impotent mt(+) gametes (which could aggregate but not fuse), and in mixtures of gametes of a single mating type with isolated flagella of the opposite mating type. Cells aggregating in tunicamycin, an inhibitor of protein glycosylation, lost their adhesiveness during aggregation and did not synthesize the 220,000 M(r) protein but instead produced a protein (possibly an underglycosylated form of A(1)) of slightly lower mol wt. The 220,000 and 165,000 M(R) proteins appeared to be flagellar proteins and not cell wall proteins because A(1) and A(2) did not co-migrate with previously identified cell wall proteins, and synthesis of the two proteins could not be detected in flagella-less (bald-2) mutant cells. Analysis of the adhesive activity of sucrose gradient fraction of detergent (octyl glucoside)-solubilized flagellar membranes revealed that fractions containing A(1) and A(2) did not have detectable adhesive activity. The possibility remains that A(1) and A(2) are adhesion molecules whose activity could not be measured in the assay we used. Alternatively, the 220,000 and 165,000 M(r) proteins may be inactivated adhesion molecules or else they may be flagellar surface proteins involved only indirectly in the adhesion process. The Rockefeller University Press 1983-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2112424/ /pubmed/6833372 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Snell, WJ
Clausell, A
Moore, WS
Flagellar adhesion in chlamydomonas induces synthesis of two high molecular weight cell surface proteins
title Flagellar adhesion in chlamydomonas induces synthesis of two high molecular weight cell surface proteins
title_full Flagellar adhesion in chlamydomonas induces synthesis of two high molecular weight cell surface proteins
title_fullStr Flagellar adhesion in chlamydomonas induces synthesis of two high molecular weight cell surface proteins
title_full_unstemmed Flagellar adhesion in chlamydomonas induces synthesis of two high molecular weight cell surface proteins
title_short Flagellar adhesion in chlamydomonas induces synthesis of two high molecular weight cell surface proteins
title_sort flagellar adhesion in chlamydomonas induces synthesis of two high molecular weight cell surface proteins
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2112424/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6833372
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AT moorews flagellaradhesioninchlamydomonasinducessynthesisoftwohighmolecularweightcellsurfaceproteins