Ovarian yolk-protein synthesis in Drosophila melanogaster |
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Authors: | Mary Bownes |
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Affiliation: | Department of Molecular Biology, University of Edinburgh, King''s Buildings, Mayfield Road, Edinburgh, U.K. |
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Abstract: | The ovaries and fat bodies of Drosophila melanogaster adult females both synthesize yolk polypeptides. In a series of experiments it has been shown that the ovaries become competent to mature in an adult male host, where only ovarian synthesis occurs, very early in metamorphosis and synthesis of yolk polypeptides begins in a time-dependent sequence related to the age of the ovary when transplanted. Maturation of ovaries occurs prior to eclosion when they are transplanted to an earlier developmental stage showing that neither the event of eclosion not the adult environment is essential in triggering yolk-polypeptide synthesis by the ovary. When metamorphosing ovaries are transplanted to a female host they take up host yolk polypeptides from the haemolymph, but this does not lead to the implanted ovary developing substantially better than in a male host where only synthesis by the ovary can occur. The regulation of ovarian yolk-polypeptide synthesis therefore appears to be autonomous to the ovary itself. There may be a trigger early in metamorphosis which induces competence in the ovary so that it subsequently initiates yolk-polypeptide gene expression at eclosion. |
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Keywords: | Metamorphosis vitellogenesis oöcyte maturation |
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