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A self-inhibitor of protein synthesis in the conidia of Glomerella cingulata
Authors:B T Lingappa  Yamuna Lingappa  Eugene Bell
Institution:(1) The College of the Holy Cross, 01610 Worcester, Massachusetts;(2) Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 02139 Cambridge, Massachusetts
Abstract:Summary A diffusible self-inhibitor of germination of conidia of Glomerella cingulata appears to act as a regulator of protein synthesis. Both uptake of labeled amino acids and their incorporation into protein are reduced by the inhibitor or by crowding. Compared to conidia incubated without self-inhibitor, conidia incubated with self-inhibitor incorporated no labeled amino acids into protein in the first hour and 80% less in 6h. Thoroughly washed conidia were more permeable to amino acids and incorporated 6 times more precursor into proteins than unwashed conidia. At high density in nutrient medium, conidia of G. cingulata preferentially form secondary conidia instead of germ tubes and a mycelium. This inhibition of germination of conidia and regulation of development is mimicked by exposing them to an auto-inhibitor extracted from used culture medium and conidial washings. Germination of conidia of G. cingulata involves two steps, an initial step of 5 h duration which continues unaffected by crowing (1.7×108/ml) and a subsequent 2 h step which conidia do not take unless they are sufficiently diluted. It is this step for which protein synthesis may be required.Non-Standard Abbreviations CHM cyloheximide - NM Neurospora minimal medium - psi pound per square inch - RPH reconstituted algal protein hydrolysate - TCA trichloroacetic acid
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