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Biology of Reproduction 59, 497-502 (1998)
©Copyright 1998 Society for the Study of Reproduction, Inc.

Trout Ovulatory Proteins Are Partially Responsible for the Anti-Proteolytic Activity Found in Trout Coelomic Fluid1

Margaret A. Coffmana, , and Frederick William Goetza

a Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556

After ovulation in salmonids, the eggs are held in the peritoneal cavity and bathed in coelomic fluid. Using a chromogenic peptide substrate, the anti-protease activity of brook trout coelomic fluid was measured. Trypsin, chymotrypsin, and pancreatic elastase activities were significantly inhibited by coelomic fluid containing 5.0, 10.0, and 25.0 µg of total protein, respectively. Using subtractive cDNA cloning, we have previously characterized a set of ovarian proteins called TOPs (trout ovulatory proteins) that are secreted into the coelomic fluid after ovulation. TOPs are most homologous to mammalian antileukoprotease, a heat- and acid-stable serine protease inhibitor. On the basis of this homology, we hypothesized that the anti-trypsin activity observed in the coelomic fluid was related to the presence of TOPs. In the present study, this hypothesis was supported by the acid- and heat-stability of the anti-trypsin activity present in coelomic fluid. Coelomic fluid could be heated to 50°C or treated at a pH less than 5.2 without a significant decrease in the inhibitory activity. Further, coelomic fluid from which TOPs were immunoprecipitated had significantly less anti-trypsin activity than nonimmunoprecipitated controls. We propose that TOP proteins are uniquely produced by the ovary and secreted into the coelomic fluid to act as protease inhibitors following ovulation.

1 Supported by USDA grant #95-37203-1962; Enhancing Animal Reproductive Efficiency Program.

2 Correspondence. FAX: (219) 631-7413; frederick.w.goetz.1{at}nd.edu




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