
The Xenopus Oocyte as a Surrogate Secretory System The Specificity of Protein Export
Author(s) -
LANE Charles D.,
COLMAN Alan,
MOHUN Timothy,
MORSER John,
CHAMPION Janet,
KOURIDES Ione,
CRAIG Roger,
HIGGINS Stephen,
JAMES Tharappel Chacko,
APPLEBAUM Shalom W.,
OHLSSON Rolf I.,
PAUCHA Eva,
HOUGHTON Michael,
MATTHEWS Jayne,
MIFLIN Benjamin J.
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1980.tb06097.x
Subject(s) - xenopus , biology , oviduct , oocyte , secretory protein , microbiology and biotechnology , messenger rna , vitellogenin , secretion , biochemistry , gene , embryo , endocrinology
Combining messenger RNA from one kind of secretory cell with the cytoplasm of another such cell can reveal the nature and specificity of protein export mechanisms. We show that messenger RNAs from secretory cells of chickens, rats, mice, frogs, guinea‐pigs, locusts and barley plants, when injected into Xenopus oocytes, direct the synthesis and export of proteins. Chicken ovalbumin, Xenopus albumin, mouse thyroid‐stimulating, hormone, locust vitellin and guinea‐pig milk proteins were identified using specific antibodies, whilst chicken lysozyme and ovomucoid, rat albumin, Xenopus vitellogenin and rat seminal vesicle basic proteins were identified provisionally from their molecular weights. Certain endogenous proteins are sequestered and secreted although most oocyte proteins arc not exported. Similarly the major polyoma viral protein and the simian virus 40 and polyoma tumour antigens are retained within the oocyte. Radioactive proteins exported by oocytes programmed with chicken oviduct or Xenopus liver RNA are not re‐exported in detectable amounts when injected into fresh oocytes, nor is there secretion of chicken oviduct or guinea‐pig mammary gland primary translation products prepared using wheat germ extracts. Thus the export of secretory proteins from oocytes cannot be explained by leakage and may require a cotranslational event. The secretory system of the oocyte is neither cell‐type nor species‐specific yet is highly selective. We suggest that the oocyte can be used as a general surrogate system for the study of gene expression, from transcription through translation to the final subcellular or extracellular destination of the processed protein.