Abstract

The experimental removal of the polar lobe, an anucleate cytoplasmic protrusion formed in preparation for the first cleavage, from the egg of Ilyanassa obsoleta results in grossly abnormal embryonic development. In experiments reported here normal and delobed embryos, as well as isolated polar lobes, were incubated with [ 35S]methionine for 4 hr beginning at the completion of the first cleavage or 21 hr later during epiboly. Proteins were extracted and examined by fluorography after resolution by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In normal embryos the synthesis of several proteins begins or ends between the two stages investigated. In isolated polar lobes a subset of these developmental changes in protein synthesis occurs, indicating that the regulation of these events is independent of concomitant nuclear activity and probably involves selective regulation of the translation of mRNA stored in the eggs. The patterns of protein synthesis in normal embryos and delobed embryos are qualitatively extremely similar, though quantitative differences are also observed. No proteins can be detected which are synthesized exclusively in polar lobes.

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