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  • Role of amphibian egg transglutaminase in the development of secondary cytostatic factor in vitro.

Role of amphibian egg transglutaminase in the development of secondary cytostatic factor in vitro.

Molecular reproduction and development (1997-07-01)
J Zhang, Y Masui
ABSTRACT

Fresh cytosols extracted from unfertilized amphibian eggs contain a cytostatic factor (CSF) which arrests the cell cycle at metaphase when microinjected into cleaving blastomeres. This CSF is sensitive to Ca2+, and is designated primary CSF (1 degree CSF). During storage of Ca(2+)-containing cytosols at 2 degrees C, stable CSF activity appears, designated secondary CSF (2 degrees CSF). In Rana pipiens egg cytosols, the development of 2 degrees CSF coincides with the formation of a protein complex with a molecular weight above 2,000 kDa, and this large molecule exhibits a high 2 degrees CSF activity when purified (Shibuya and Masui, 1989: Development 106:799-808). The present study shows that both the formation of 2 degrees CSF protein complex and the development of its activity are inhibited by ethylamine and glycine-ethyl-ester (GEE), both known as potent transglutaminase (TGase) inhibitors. An affinity-purified polyclonal antibody raised against mammalian transglutaminase reacts with an approximately 68-kDa protein in fresh egg cytosols, as well as with the 2 degrees CSF protein complex. In cytosols deprived of transglutaminase by immunoprecipitation, neither the development of 2 degrees CSF activity nor the formation of its protein complex can occur. These results indicate that transglutaminase of Rana pipiens eggs is responsible or the formation of 2 degrees CSF, and that transglutaminase itself is incorporated into 2 degrees CSF molecules.

MATERIALS
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Sigma-Aldrich
Glycine ethyl ester hydrochloride, 99%