The polytene chromosome puff at 68C on the Drosophila melanogaster third chromosome is thought from genetic experiments to contain the structural gene for one of the secreted salivary gland glue polypeptides, sgs-3. Previous work has demonstrated that the DNA included in this puff contains sequences that are transcribed to give three different polyadenylated RNAs that are abundant in third-larval-instar salivary glands. These have been called the group II, group III, and group IV RNAs. In the experiments reported here, we used the nucleotide sequence of the DNA coding for these RNAs to predict some of the physical and chemical properties expected of their protein products, including molecular weight, amino acid composition, and amino acid sequence. Salivary gland polypeptides with molecular weights similar to those expected for the 68C RNA translation products, and with the expected degree of incorporation of different radioactive amino acids, were purified. These proteins were shown by amino acid sequencing to correspond to the protein products of the 68C RNAs. It was further shown that each of these proteins is a part of the secreted salivary gland glue: the group IV RNA codes for the previously described sgs-3, whereas the group II and III RNAs code for the newly identified glue polypeptides sgs-8 and sgs-7.Drosophila melanogaster begins life as a fertilized egg, which after a day of embryonic development hatches as a wormlike first-instar larva. After another day this larva molts and becomes a larger, second-instar larva; one further day leads to a second molt and the last stage of larval life, the third larval instar. This lasts two days, at the end of which the larval cuticle hardens to form a pupal case. After an immobile prepupal period, pupation and metamorphosis occur, resulting in an adult fly. The major synthetic activity of the salivary gland cells of the third-instar larva is the production of a set of about 10 polypeptides that are secreted into the lumen of the gland after synthesis and that at the end of larval life are expelled through the duct of the salivary glands and deposited on the surface upon which the larva rests. This protein secretion serves as a glue that causes the prepupa, and subsequently the pupa, to adhere to its substrate for the duration of the pupal period (5,8,15,16