Abstract
Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis has been used to analyse basic protein changes during the final stages of spermiogenesis in the house cricket. Mature sperm were obtained from the spermathecae of inseminated females. Their basic protein is electrophoretically heterogeneous, with two major and two minor components, all of unusually high mobilities, as expected ofprotamine. No histones are present. Testis also contains basic protein components of high mobilities, although in small amount relative to the histones present. Testis preparations were centrifuged on a density gradient of colloidal silica to separate nuclei of different stages of spermiogenesis from each other, and it was found that very late spermatids contain relatively large amounts of protamine. At least seven different protamine-like components, each with a different mobility, occur during the final maturation stages. The particular components present, and their abundancies, vary during development. The complement first found in spermatids is different from that of a later spermatid; still another complement is found in sperm from the seminal vesicle; and still another in mature sperm. Components which are abundant in spermatids are progressively eliminated, while components which are barely detectable in them gradually increase in abundance to become the major components of the basic protein complement at maturity.
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