Juvenile hormone affects the splicing of Culex quinquefasciatus early trypsin messenger RNA
Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology
Published online on September 03, 2018
Abstract
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- "\nAbstract\nThe full length of Culex quiquefasciatus early trypsin has been cloned
and sequenced and a three‐dimensional (3D) model of the enzyme was built showing
that the enzyme has the canonical trypsin’s active pocket containing H78, D123,
S129, and D128. The biosynthesis of juvenile hormone (JH) III by the corpora allata
(CA) in female \nCx. quiquefasciatus is sugar‐dependent. Females that were maintained
on water after emergence synthesize very little JH III, JH III bisepoxide, and methyl
farnesoate (MF) (3.8, 1.1, and 0.8 fmol/4 hr/CA, respectively). One hour after sugar
feeding, the synthesis of JH III and JH III bisepoxide reached a maximum (11.3 and
5.9 fmol/4 hr/CA, respectively) whereas MF biosynthesis reached a maximum at 24 hr
(5.2 fmol/4 hr/CA). The early trypsin is transcribed with a short intron (51 nt)
is spliced when JH III biosynthesis is high in sugar fed and at 1 hr after the blood
meal (22 and 15 fmol/4 hr/CA, respectively). We investigated the transcriptional
and posttranscriptional regulation of the early trypsin gene showing that JH III
concentrations influence splicing. In the absence JH III the unspliced transcript
is linked by a phosphoamide bond at the 5′‐end to RNA ribonuleoprotein (RNP). The
biosynthesis of the early trypsin was followed in ligated abdomens (without CA)
of newly emerged females that fed blood by enema. Our results show that the early
trypsin biosynthesis depends on sugar and blood feeding, whereas the late trypsin
biosynthesis does not depend on sugar feeding, or JH III biosynthesis. Downregulating
the early trypsin transcript does not affect the late trypsin.\n"
- Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology, EarlyView.