Purification, characterization, and partial structure of D factor from Polysphondylium violaceum. 1988

M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
Biology Department, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY 12180-3590.

The A component of D factor (DfA) was overproduced during development of wild type Polyspondylium violaceum strain China after starvation in liquid medium. Crude DfA excreted by strain China was partially purified by ultrafiltration using Amicon YM10 and YM2 filters with DfA extracted from the filtrate by absorption onto a preparative grade C-18 resin. The concentrated material was further purified on a C-18 analytical column using both acetonitrile:water and methanol:water gradients. This highly purified fraction was a single component with a final specific activity of greater than 10(6) units per mg dry weight. Purified DfA is red having a broad visible absorbance at 500 nm and a ultraviolet (uv) absorbance at 290-300 nm. The red chromophore is sensitive to pH and to oxidation-reduction. 1H and 13C nmr studies with purified DfA indicate that it is a C11 compound with both polar and non-polar regions. The non-polar region has been identified as a hexanone and is the same as the side chain of DIF from Dictyostelium discoideum. Purified DfA has been used in studies with the D factor non-producing mutant, tsg-119 cyc-1 aggA586 (A586), to show that neither production of glorin nor chemotactic sensitivity to glorin are affected by D factor. However, founder cells develop in A586 mutant populations only after addition of D factor. These data suggest that DfA may be necessary for induction of aggregate formation by aggregation-competent amoebae.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D009235 Myxomycetes A division of organisms that exist vegetatively as complex mobile plasmodia, reproduce by means of spores, and have complex life cycles. They are now classed as protozoa but formerly were considered fungi. Myxomycota,Protosteliomycetes,Slime Molds, Plasmodial,Slime Molds, True,Mold, Plasmodial Slime,Mold, True Slime,Molds, Plasmodial Slime,Molds, True Slime,Myxomycete,Myxomycotas,Plasmodial Slime Mold,Plasmodial Slime Molds,Protosteliomycete,Slime Mold, Plasmodial,Slime Mold, True,True Slime Mold,True Slime Molds
D002449 Cell Aggregation The phenomenon by which dissociated cells intermixed in vitro tend to group themselves with cells of their own type. Aggregation, Cell,Aggregations, Cell,Cell Aggregations
D002633 Chemotaxis The movement of cells or organisms toward or away from a substance in response to its concentration gradient. Haptotaxis
D002851 Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid Liquid chromatographic techniques which feature high inlet pressures, high sensitivity, and high speed. Chromatography, High Performance Liquid,Chromatography, High Speed Liquid,Chromatography, Liquid, High Pressure,HPLC,High Performance Liquid Chromatography,High-Performance Liquid Chromatography,UPLC,Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography,Chromatography, High-Performance Liquid,High-Performance Liquid Chromatographies,Liquid Chromatography, High-Performance
D005656 Fungal Proteins Proteins found in any species of fungus. Fungal Gene Products,Fungal Gene Proteins,Fungal Peptides,Gene Products, Fungal,Yeast Proteins,Gene Proteins, Fungal,Peptides, Fungal,Proteins, Fungal
D013053 Spectrophotometry The art or process of comparing photometrically the relative intensities of the light in different parts of the spectrum.
D014462 Ultrafiltration The separation of particles from a suspension by passage through a filter with very fine pores. In ultrafiltration the separation is accomplished by convective transport; in DIALYSIS separation relies instead upon differential diffusion. Ultrafiltration occurs naturally and is a laboratory procedure. Artificial ultrafiltration of the blood is referred to as HEMOFILTRATION or HEMODIAFILTRATION (if combined with HEMODIALYSIS).

Related Publications

M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
November 1991, The Biochemical journal,
M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
November 1988, Molecular and cellular biochemistry,
M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
October 1987, Development, growth & differentiation,
M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
March 1979, The Journal of biological chemistry,
M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
September 1995, Biochimica et biophysica acta,
M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
March 1976, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,
M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
April 1981, Developmental biology,
M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
May 2001, Veterinary microbiology,
M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
May 1980, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.),
M H Hanna, and M Fatone, and C Newth-Clark, and J Salerno, and S Clemans
January 1972, Preparative biochemistry,
Copied contents to your clipboard!