Abstract
From crude extracts ofHydra tissue a substance has been purified which prevents or retards the asexual reproduction by budding. The molecular weight is in the range of 300 to 1000 daltons. Inhibition of bud formation can be observed with concentrations equivalent to the extract from one hydra per 4 ml, that is, to a more than 10,000-fold dilution of the initial crude extract of a hydra. The purified inhibitor is active at a concentration of less than 10−8 M. Most of the inhibitor present inHydra is bound to cells. Within the cells the substance is mainly bound to particulate structures which sediment at 10,000 g. Its concentration is highest in the hypostomal region and decreases in the direction of the tentacles and peduncle. A second, lower, peak has been found in the basal disc. Treatment of the animals with a toxic agent (nitrogen mustard) which depletes the animal of interstitial cells, nematocytes and nematoblasts excludes the possibility that the inhibitor is present to any great extent in these cells. In conjunction with cell separation experiments by centrifugation of fixed cells in suspension, these results indicate that nerve cells are the most likely sites of storage of the inhibiting substance, although epithelial cells are not excluded as sources for the inhibitor.