Abstract

When [1- 14C]acetate was injected into rats intratesticularly in the presence of cycloheximide to inhibit protein synthesis, the label was incorporated into histone fractions F2a1 and F3 and into non-histone chromosomal proteins of each of the following stages of spermatogenesis: spermatogonia-preleptotene spermatocytes, leptotene-zygotene-pachytene-diplotene primary spermatocytes, and spermatids. Acetylation of histones was particularly active in the spermatid stages. There was no significant incorporation of acetate into the lysine-rich histone fractions F1 and X 1. In early periods of in vivo incorporation of [ 3H]amino acids into histones the acetylated histone F2a1 fractions had higher specific activities than the main band of F2a1, but with the passage of time the label moved into the principal band to the extent that specific activities in the acetylated and principal bands were approximately equal at 6 days. However, at 24–36 days the specific activities were again higher in the acetylated bands than in the principal band of F2a1. These data support the conclusions of Candido, Louie, and Dixon, from experiments with trout testis, that acetylation of histone F2a1 may be important in the process of combination of this protein with DNA in chromatin at the spermatogonia-primary spermatocyte stage and also in the subsequent removal of this histone for replacement by protamines at the spermatid stage. [ 3H]Amino acids were incorporated into histone fractions X 1 and F1 at approximately equal rates, and there was no evidence that one of these fractions was a precursor of the other. Chromatin of the seminiferous epithelial cells of rat testis has a firmly bound acetylase which catalyzes the in vitro acetylation of histones F3 and F2a1 by acetyl CoA.

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