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Insect protein synthesis in frog cells: the translation of honey bee promelittin messenger RNA in Xenopus oocytes
Authors:I Kindas-Mügge  C D Lane  G Kreil
Affiliation:1. Institute of Molecular Biology, Austrian Academy of Sciences Wasagasse 9, A-1090 Vienna, Austria;2. Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology Hills Road, Cambridge, England
Abstract:Venom glands of young queen bees (Apis mellifera) synthesize the toxic peptide melittin as their main product. Melittin is formed by proteolytic cleavage of a precursor, promelittin. Unfractionated RNA prepared from venom glands was injected into Xenopus oocytes and was shown to direct the synthesis of a promelittin-like substance. About half of the peptide chain made in oocytes has been sequenced; the 17 amino acid residues identified correspond exactly with sequences found in promelittin from venom gland cells. These results yield final proof that injected messenger RNAs can be read with great fidelity. The translation of a messenger from an insect gland shows that at least some of the translational systems within the oocyte are neither cell-type nor phylum specific. It seems likely that the oocyte can be used to assay any kind of eukaryotic mRNA.The conversion of promelittin to melittin could not be detected in oocytes. Moreover, the promelittin synthesized in oocytes differs at the carboxyl end from the product made in gland cells, for the latter terminates with glutamine amide while the oocyte material probably ends with an amino acid with a free α-carboxyl group. Some of the post-translational modifications characteristic of gland cells thus do not seem to take place in oocytes.
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