Abstract

By means of immunobiochemical and immunocytological techniques it was found that the aggregation factor (AF) from the sponge Geodia cydonium is stored in vesicles of spherulous cells. During the reaggregation process of dissociated cells, the AF which is present extracellularly was determined to be bound to the cell-surface-associated aggregation receptor (AR) only during the initial phase (0–5 h after addition of the AF to the single cell suspension). At later stages (20 h), the AF colocalized with extracellular structures, e.g., collagen and glycoconjugates. Immobilized to nitrocellulose, the AR, a molecule with M r of 43.5 kDa, displayed its binding affinity to the AF only if it was isolated from early aggregates (5 h). The transition of the AF-susceptible to the AF-deficient state of the plasma membrane was mimicked in vitro by incubation of plasma membranes from early aggregates with purified protein kinase C. This conversion to the AF-deficient state could be prevented by the protein kinase C inhibitor staurosporine. Together with earlier findings, which revealed that the AR is phosphorylated by protein kinase C, we propose that in the sponge system this enzyme controls intercellular processes involved in morphogenesis.

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