Abstract

The changes in basic nuclear proteins throughout cuttle-fish spermiogenesis were investigated both by immunocytochemical procedures and by isolation of late spermatid nuclei (by virtue of their resistance to sonication). Antibodies were raised in rabbits to a protein, named protein T, isolated from testis chromatin. The anti-protein T immune serum was found to recognize protein T and not histones from the testis. Immunoperoxidase staining of sections or of smears of testis with anti-protein T antibodies showed that protein T appears in the nuclei of round spermatids, is abundant in elongating spermatid nuclei, but cannot be detected in elongated spermatids. Nuclei from these elongated spermatids were isolated by sonication treatment of testis cells. A protein, named protein Sp, with the characteristic mobility of a protamine, was isolated from elongated spermatid nuclei. This protein has the same mobility as the protamine present in mature spermatozoa. Taken together, the results indicate that in cuttle-fish, nuclear protein transitions involve the replacement of histones by a spermatid-specific protein (protein T), which is replaced at the end of elongation of the nucleus by a protamine (protein Sp). Thus, spermiogenesis of the cuttle-fish (and perhaps of other cephalopods), shows two basic nuclear protein transitions, which are similar to the transitions observed in higher vertebrates such as mammals.

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