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STUDIES ON CELL METABOLISM AND CELL DIVISION : VI. OBSERVATIONS ON THE GLYCOGEN CONTENT,CARBOHYDRATE CONSUMPTION,LACTIC ACID PRODUCTION,AND AMMONIA PRODUCTION OF EGGS OF ARBACIA PUNCTULATA
Authors:John O Hutchens  A K Keltch  M E Krahl  G H A Clowes
Institution:From the Lilly Research Laboratories, Indianapolis, Indiana, and the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts
Abstract:1. Under the present conditions of experiment, Arbacia eggs were found to contain an average of 110 mg. of acid-hydrolyzable carbohydrate (calculated as glucose) per gm. of egg protein. This carbohydrate was almost all in the egg proper, little or none being found in the jelly. To permit conversion of the data to other bases of reference the relation of nitrogen content to wet and dry weight and to egg number were determined. The eggs were found to contain 23.9 per cent solids, 0.10 mg. nitrogen per mg. dry weight, and 5.93 mg. nitrogen per 106 cells. From these results, about 7 per cent of the egg dry weight is acid-hydrolyzable carbohydrate and about 65 per cent is protein. 2. Approximately one-half of the total acid-hydrolyzable carbohydrate was isolated in the form of an alkali-stable, alcohol-precipitable carbohydrate. This substance gave a typical glycogen color test with iodine, yielded glucose on acid hydrolysis, and had, within the limits of experimental error, the same optical rotation as glycogen from other animal sources. Since known amounts of glycogen were completely recovered when carried through the isolation process, the nature of one-half of the acid-hydrolyzable carbohydrate of Arbacia eggs remains undetermined. 3. In order to gain some estimate of the extent to which Arbacia eggs utilize their total carbohydrate for development, determinations of the oxygen consumption, respiratory quotient, carbohydrate consumption, lactic acid production, and ammonia production were made. While all samples of eggs were found to utilize carbohydrate from the 15th to the 24th hours of development at 20°C., certain samples of eggs consumed little or no carbohydrate from the 1st to the 6th hours, the period during which cell division proceeds most rapidly. In a number of instances where carbohydrate breakdown was lacking, a substantial proportion of the oxygen consumption could be accounted for on the basis of processes involving oxidation of protein or protein breakdown products.
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