Abstract
The large subunits of mitochondrial ribosomes were isolated from two related frog species, Xenopus laevis and X. mulleri, and their proteins were compared by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Three of the proteins observed in X. laevis are absent from X. mulleri, and four of the proteins observed in X. mulleri are absent from X. laevis. More than these seven such species-specific proteins may occur. Reciprocal crosses between frogs of the two species gave two groups of F1 hybrids. Nuclear genes in these hybrids derive equally from both species, while mitochondrial DNA (and therefore mitochondrial rRNA) derived exclusively from the maternal species. Electrophoretic analyses of the large subunit proteins of these F1 animals revealed that four of the species-specific proteins are present only when their corresponding species was the mother. While this result is consistent with the coding of these four proteins by mitochondrial DNA, it does not provide evidence against nuclear coding of these proteins. A fifth protein is absent from both F1 hybrids. A sixth is present in both F1 hybrids, and a seventh is present only when its corresponding species was the father. We conclude that at least these latter two mitochondrial ribosomal proteins are encoded by nuclear genes.
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