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IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF INSECT METAMORPHOSIS : II. THE ROLE OF A SEX-LIMITED BLOOD PROTEIN IN EGG FORMATION BY THE CECROPIA SILKWORM

1. In the pupal stage of the cecropia silkworm, antigen 7, a protein with the solubility characteristics of an albumin, is present in female blood in approximately a thousand times higher concentration than in the blood of males. Antigen 7 is undetectable in the blood of larvae of either sex. It fir...

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Autor principal: Telfer, William H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1954
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2147450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13143187
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author Telfer, William H.
author_facet Telfer, William H.
author_sort Telfer, William H.
collection PubMed
description 1. In the pupal stage of the cecropia silkworm, antigen 7, a protein with the solubility characteristics of an albumin, is present in female blood in approximately a thousand times higher concentration than in the blood of males. Antigen 7 is undetectable in the blood of larvae of either sex. It first appears in the blood after the larva has spun its cocoon, and is present throughout all subsequent stages of metamorphosis. Late in the pupal-adult transformation, when the eggs are produced, the concentration of antigen 7 in female blood decreases significantly. 2. An antigen which could not be distinguished from antigen 7 immunologically is present in solution in the yolk of unfertilized eggs. 3. In females which, by ovariectomy, were prevented from forming eggs, the concentration of antigen 7 in the blood increased during the usual period of egg formation rather than undergoing the normal decrease. Ovaries transferred to the hemocoel of males produced eggs but were unable to incorporate antigen 7 in the yolk unless a detectable amount of the protein was present in the blood. The ovaries of polyphemus females which had been transfused with cecropia blood incorporated cecropia antigen 7 into the eggs they produced. These lines of evidence indicate that antigen 7 is secreted into the blood by some tissue other than the ovaries, and that it is subsequently drawn from the blood and deposited in the yolk. 4. The concentration of antigen 7 in the clear, liquid fraction of the yolk is four times higher than the maximum concentration attained in the blood during metamorphosis, and twenty times higher than that of the blood at the conclusion of egg formation. The protein thus appears to be transferred from blood to yolk against a concentration gradient.
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spelling pubmed-21474502008-04-23 IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF INSECT METAMORPHOSIS : II. THE ROLE OF A SEX-LIMITED BLOOD PROTEIN IN EGG FORMATION BY THE CECROPIA SILKWORM Telfer, William H. J Gen Physiol Article 1. In the pupal stage of the cecropia silkworm, antigen 7, a protein with the solubility characteristics of an albumin, is present in female blood in approximately a thousand times higher concentration than in the blood of males. Antigen 7 is undetectable in the blood of larvae of either sex. It first appears in the blood after the larva has spun its cocoon, and is present throughout all subsequent stages of metamorphosis. Late in the pupal-adult transformation, when the eggs are produced, the concentration of antigen 7 in female blood decreases significantly. 2. An antigen which could not be distinguished from antigen 7 immunologically is present in solution in the yolk of unfertilized eggs. 3. In females which, by ovariectomy, were prevented from forming eggs, the concentration of antigen 7 in the blood increased during the usual period of egg formation rather than undergoing the normal decrease. Ovaries transferred to the hemocoel of males produced eggs but were unable to incorporate antigen 7 in the yolk unless a detectable amount of the protein was present in the blood. The ovaries of polyphemus females which had been transfused with cecropia blood incorporated cecropia antigen 7 into the eggs they produced. These lines of evidence indicate that antigen 7 is secreted into the blood by some tissue other than the ovaries, and that it is subsequently drawn from the blood and deposited in the yolk. 4. The concentration of antigen 7 in the clear, liquid fraction of the yolk is four times higher than the maximum concentration attained in the blood during metamorphosis, and twenty times higher than that of the blood at the conclusion of egg formation. The protein thus appears to be transferred from blood to yolk against a concentration gradient. The Rockefeller University Press 1954-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2147450/ /pubmed/13143187 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1954, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research 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 Article
Telfer, William H.
IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF INSECT METAMORPHOSIS : II. THE ROLE OF A SEX-LIMITED BLOOD PROTEIN IN EGG FORMATION BY THE CECROPIA SILKWORM
title IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF INSECT METAMORPHOSIS : II. THE ROLE OF A SEX-LIMITED BLOOD PROTEIN IN EGG FORMATION BY THE CECROPIA SILKWORM
title_full IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF INSECT METAMORPHOSIS : II. THE ROLE OF A SEX-LIMITED BLOOD PROTEIN IN EGG FORMATION BY THE CECROPIA SILKWORM
title_fullStr IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF INSECT METAMORPHOSIS : II. THE ROLE OF A SEX-LIMITED BLOOD PROTEIN IN EGG FORMATION BY THE CECROPIA SILKWORM
title_full_unstemmed IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF INSECT METAMORPHOSIS : II. THE ROLE OF A SEX-LIMITED BLOOD PROTEIN IN EGG FORMATION BY THE CECROPIA SILKWORM
title_short IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF INSECT METAMORPHOSIS : II. THE ROLE OF A SEX-LIMITED BLOOD PROTEIN IN EGG FORMATION BY THE CECROPIA SILKWORM
title_sort immunological studies of insect metamorphosis : ii. the role of a sex-limited blood protein in egg formation by the cecropia silkworm
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2147450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13143187
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