
pmid: 6173274
Abstract Five stage-specific cuticles are produced during the development of Drosophila . Urea-soluble proteins were extracted from each developmental stage and compared by gel electrophoresis. Proteins from first and second instar cuticle are identical except for minor differences in two proteins. Each subsequent stage, third instar, pupa, and adult, has a unique set of cuticle proteins. Qualitative changes within stages are seen in proteins from third instar and adult cuticle. Third instar cuticle proteins can be divided into “early” [proteins 2a, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 8] and “late” [proteins 2 and 1] groups. Adult cuticle proteins change in relative amounts during pharate adult development and change mobility at eclosion. The lower abdominal pupal cuticle lacks a protein found in the pupal cuticle covering the head and thorax. Cuticle proteins from each stage are immunologically related. Nonetheless, electrophoretic variants of three larval proteins do not affect any major changes in the electrophoretic mobility of proteins from other stages. We propose that each stage (except first and second instar) has proteins encoded by discrete genes.
Epitopes, Drosophila melanogaster, Solubility, Larva, Animals, Proteins, Urea, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Epithelium
Epitopes, Drosophila melanogaster, Solubility, Larva, Animals, Proteins, Urea, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Epithelium
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