Abstract

Salivary gland protein synthesis in Chironomus tentans larvae was analyzed from the mid-third instar to larval pupation. Correcting for stage specific variations in the specific activity of the amino acid pool revealed a 30–40% reduction in the rate of protein synthesis during the larval moult. Except for a transient increase early in the fourth instar, this low rate of protein synthesis was maintained until the pharate pupal period when protein synthesis dramatically increased: maximum synthesis occurred in mid-pharate pupae with a subsequent decline correlating with gland autolysis and cell death at pupation. Each developmental period was characterized by a particular pattern of secretory protein synthesis: high and 35,000 daltons peptides were maximally synthesized only at particular larval stages, being reduced or absent in post-ecdysis, diapause and autolysing salivary glands. Except for the ecdysone puffs, and as otherwise previously noted ( Clever, 1961, 1962), puffing activity during the peri-moult period remained relatively constant and did not decrease by the 30–40% predicted from the decreased rate of protein synthesis. The nearly complete loss in synthesis of the 35,000 daltons peptide was not accompanied by regression in any puff.

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