Mating inPhysarum polycephalum involves the fusion of two haploid amoebae and the differentiation of the resulting diploid zygote into a multinucleate plasmodium. Mating proceeds optimally with amoebae growing on an agar medium at pH 5.0. At pH 6.2, the amoebae still grow normally, but mating is completely blocked. The barrier at pH 6.2 is not in the differentiation step, since preformed diploids readily convert to plasmodia at this pH. The barrier can be overcome by raising the ionic strength of the agar medium; the effect, moreover, is not ion-specific. We have discovered a genetic locus,imz (ionicmodulation of zygote formation), that affects the upper pH limit for mating; the respective limits associated with the two known alleles,imz-1 andimz-2, are pH 5.6 and pH 6.0 at low ionic strength. Animz-1×imz-2 mating displays the pH 6.0 limit;imz-2 is therefore "dominant". We suggest that this new gene affects a cell component that is exposed to the exterior of the amoeba and is involved in the fusion step of mating.
The glycoprotein hormone hCG and its free alpha-subunit are secreted by the clonal choriocarcinoma cell line JEG-3. Free hCG alpha has a larger apparent mol wt (22,000-24,000) than the combined hCG alpha (18,000-19,000) obtained by dissociation of the hCG secreted by these cells. Techniques developed for the specific isolation and purification of the free and combined hCG alpha forms and for the preparation of glycopeptides from these subunits have permitted detection of the incorporation of D-[3H]glucosamine [( 3H]GlcN) and L-[3H]fucose into both alpha-subunit forms. Relative to their [35S]methionine content, 2.3-fold more [3H]GlcN and 6-fold more L-[3H]fucose were incorporated into free hCG alpha than into combined hCG alpha. Analyses of [3H]GlcN glycopeptides prepared from free and combined hCG alpha indicate that the 22,000- to 24,000-dalton subunit form contained more [3H]GlcN and 27% more of the GlcN metabolite N-acetylneuraminic acid than the 18,000- to 19,000-dalton hCG alpha-subunit, than both hCG alpha forms contained two major N-linked oligosaccharide chains differing primarily in their NeuAc content, and that most of the [3H]GlcN was incorporated as GlcN or metabolites of GlcN other than N-acetylneuraminic acid. These studies provide direct chemical evidence of a higher content of carbohydrate in the larger free alpha-subunit form.
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