During the embryonic development of chick calvaria (membranous cranial bones), the relative rate of procollagen synthesis increased from about 12% of total protein synthesis on Day 10 to about 65% on Day 17. This increase is due to a 1.7-fold increase in the absolute rate of procollagen synthesis and a 3-fold decrease in the synthesis of noncollagenous proteins. The increase in procollagen synthesis is directly proportional to an increase in procollagen mRNA content per cell as measured either by cell-free translation or by hybridization with complementary DNA. The results indicate that translational control of procollagen mRNA does not play a substantial role during calvaria development and that the specialization in the synthesis of this protein is largely due to the loss or inactivation of mRNAs for noncollagenous proteins.

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