24 research outputs found

    Microarray-Based Transcriptomic Analysis of Differences between Long-Term Gregarious and Solitarious Desert Locusts

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    Desert locusts (Schistocerca gregaria) show an extreme form of phenotypic plasticity and can transform between a cryptic solitarious phase and a swarming gregarious phase. The two phases differ extensively in behavior, morphology and physiology but very little is known about the molecular basis of these differences. We used our recently generated Expressed Sequence Tag (EST) database derived from S. gregaria central nervous system (CNS) to design oligonucleotide microarrays and compare the expression of thousands of genes in the CNS of long-term gregarious and solitarious adult desert locusts. This identified 214 differentially expressed genes, of which 40% have been annotated to date. These include genes encoding proteins that are associated with CNS development and modeling, sensory perception, stress response and resistance, and fundamental cellular processes. Our microarray analysis has identified genes whose altered expression may enable locusts of either phase to deal with the different challenges they face. Genes for heat shock proteins and proteins which confer protection from infection were upregulated in gregarious locusts, which may allow them to respond to acute physiological challenges. By contrast the longer-lived solitarious locusts appear to be more strongly protected from the slowly accumulating effects of ageing by an upregulation of genes related to anti-oxidant systems, detoxification and anabolic renewal. Gregarious locusts also had a greater abundance of transcripts for proteins involved in sensory processing and in nervous system development and plasticity. Gregarious locusts live in a more complex sensory environment than solitarious locusts and may require a greater turnover of proteins involved in sensory transduction, and possibly greater neuronal plasticity

    Identification of the yeast DNA polymerase I gene with antibody probes

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    Partially overlapping fragments of the gene encoding yeast DNA polymerase I have been cloned by immunological screening of a yeast genomic library constructed in the phage \u3bb expression vector \u3bbgt11. The three gene fragments we analyzed in detail encode part of a yeast protein that has been identified as yeast DNA polymerase I, because it shares with this enzyme a number of antigenic determinants. In fact, the yeast protein fragments expressed by the recombinant phages react with both polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies raised against different, highly purified preparations of DNA polymerase I. Moreover, they can be used to affinity purify antibodies specifically reacting with active DNA polymerase I polypeptides and they compete with the yeast enzyme for binding to antibodies that inhibit catalytic activity. The gene is located on chromosome XIV in the yeast genome, and it is transcribed as a 5.2 kb mRNA

    Identification of the yeast DNA polymerase I gene with antibody probes.

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    Expression of odorant-binding proteins and chemosensory proteins in some Hymenoptera

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    The expression of chemosensory proteins (CSPs) and odorant-binding proteins (OBPs) in individuals of different castes and ages have been monitored in three species of social hymenopterans, Polistes dominulus (Hymenoptera, Vespidae), Vespa crabro (Hymenoptera, Vespidae) and Apis mellifera (Hymenoptera, Apidae), using PCR with specific primers and polyclonal antibodies. In the paper wasp P. dominulus, OBP is equally expressed in antennae, wings and legs of all castes and ages, while CSP is often specifically present in antennae and in some cases also in legs. In the vespine species V crabro CSP is antennal specific, while OBP is also expressed in legs and wings. The three CSPs and the five OBPs of A. mellifera show a complex pattern of expression, where both classes of proteins include members specifically expressed in antennae and others present in other parts of the body. These data indicate that at least in some hymenopteran species CSPs are specifically expressed in antennae and could perform roles in chemosensory perception so far assigned only to OBPs. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
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