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The follicle cells are a major site of vitellogenin synthesis in Drosophila melanogaster
Authors:Mark D. Brennan  Amy J. Weiner  Thomas J. Goralski  Anthony P. Mahowald
Affiliation:Program in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405 USA
Abstract:Pulse labeling of proteins, in vivo, followed by indirect immunoprecipitation of the vitellogenin polypeptides, has shown that not only the thoracic and abdominal fat bodies but also the ovary devote a significant percentage of their synthetic capacity to vitellogenin (VG) production. These methods have also shown that ovarian stages 9 and 10 contribute the majority of VG synthesized by the ovary and that the follicular epithelium of these stages is the specific site of VG synthesis. In situ hybridization (of a probe containing the coding regions of the two larger polypeptides) to sections of ovaries confirmed that the VG mRNAs are abundant species in the cytoplasm of stage 9 and 10 follicle cells. In addition, two of the three polypeptides (VGP1 and VGP2) are produced at roughly equal levels by the follicle cells, but the smallest polypeptide (VGP3) is produced at one-fourth this level by these cells. Hybridization of cloned genomic probes (T. Barnett, C. Pachl, J. P. Gergen, and P. C. Wensink, 1980, Cell21, 729–738) to RNA bound on nitrocellulose filters has shown that the ovary contributes aproximately 35% of the total amount of the mRNAs coding for VGP1 and VGP2 but only about 10% of the mRNA for VGP3. The same procedure demonstrated that the levels of all three VG mRNAs during follicular development closely parallel VG polypeptide synthesis. Finally, culture of ovaries in males has shown that the mRNA levels accurately reflect the follicle cell contribution to VG synthesis.
Keywords:To whom correspondence should be addressed.
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