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ECB-ART-52075
Dev Growth Differ 1982 Jan 01;244:359-368. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-169X.1982.00359.x.
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Exogut Formation by the Treatment of Sea Urchin Embryos with Ascorbate and α-Ketoglutarate: (collagen synthesis/sea urchin embryo/protocollagen hydroxylation/exogut formation).

Mizoguchi H , Yasumasu I .


Abstract
In sea urchin embryos at the stages from hatch out to the pluteus stage, [14 C]proline incorporation into hot trichloroacetic acid TCA-extractable proteins occurred during an exposure to [14 C]proline for 3 hrs at 20°C. The rate of [14 C]proline incorporation into hot TCA-extractable proteins was higher in gastrulae and plutei than in blastulae. Percentage of [14 C]hydroxyproline residue to whole radioactivity of the hot TCA-extractable proteins was quite low at the blastula stage and increased exponentially during futher development. Production of [14 C]hydroxyproline residue at the blastula stage, as well as at the later stages, was stimulated by ascorbate and α-ketoglutarate, activators of protocollagen proline hydroxylase, and inhibited by α, α'-dipyridyl, an inhibitor of this enzyme. It is also probable that the enzyme in the embryos is not fully activated because of low amounts of activating substances. These suggest that blastulae,…, also have a potency of protocollagen hydroxylation. Blastula kept in sea water containing ascorbateand α-ketoglutarate became undeveloped embryo with large exogut. Gastrula developed normally to pluteus even in the presence of these compounds. The embryos, kept in sea water containing these compounds from fertilization to hatch out, also developed normally. Exogut formation in the embryos treated by these compounds, as well as normal archenteron formation, was inhibited by α, α'-dipyridyl.

PubMed ID: 37281471
Article link: Dev Growth Differ