Abstract

An ovarian extract of Xenopus laevis exhibited in SDS-PAGE analyses an activity cleaving vitellogenin to lipovitellins under mildly acidic conditions. This activity was pepstatin-sensitive and inhibited by monospecific anti-rat liver cathepsin D antibody and thus identified as cathepsin D. Immunoblot analysis showed that two proteins of 43 kDa and 36 kDa immunoreacted with the antibody. Immunocytochemical staining revealed that the enzyme was located in the cortical cytoplasm of stage I and II oocytes and in small yolk platelets and nascent forms of large yolk platelets in the cortical cytoplasm of stage III oocytes. In stage IV and V oocytes, small yolk platelets retained the immuno-staining but large yolk platelets decreased it. No immuno-positive signals were observed in oocytes at stage VI. When examined by immunoelectron microscopy, gold particles indicated that cathepsin D was located on dense lamellar bodies in the cortical cytoplasm of stage I and II oocytes. The particles were located on primordial yolk platelets and on the superficial layer of small yolk platelets in stage III oocytes, while they were sparse or not present at all on large yolk platelets in stage IV and V oocytes. These results indicate that cathepsin D plays a key role in vitellogenesis by cleaving endocytosed vitellogenin to yolk proteins in developing oocytes.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call