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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 4010

Norman E. Williams; Biochemical Approaches to Problems of Cellular Patterning. J.Protozool. 24(1):14-18, 1977

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The expression of intracellular patterning is perhaps nowhere more impressive than in the arrangments of structural elements associated with the cell surface in protozoa. The view is proposed that biochemical studies of protozoan plasma membranes and associated surface structures represent important contributions of potential significance for the understanding of the perpetuation and expression of positional information at the intracellular level. Some recent work dealing with the isolation, identification, and metabolism of pellicular proteins in Tetrahymena is presented and discussed. Some integral membrane proteins have been identified by iodination and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Labeling studies suggest heterogeneous turnover rates within the group of presently identified membrane proteins. High molecular weight proteins with some similarity to spectrin have been isolated from Tetrahymena epiplasm. It is suggested that the ciliate epiplasm is one example of membrane-associated, actomyosin-like systems found in variety of cell types. The epiplasm may play a role in the positioning of surface-associated structures and in the control of cell shape.