1 research outputs found
Functional Conservation and Structural Diversification of Silk Sericins in Two Moth Species
Sericins are hydrophilic structural
proteins produced by caterpillars
in the middle section of silk glands and layered over fibroin proteins
secreted in the posterior section. In the process of spinning, fibroins
form strong solid filaments, while sericins seal the pair of filaments
into a single fiber and glue the fiber into a cocoon. Galleria mellonella and the previously examined Bombyx mori harbor three sericin genes that encode
proteins containing long repetitive regions. Galleria sericin genes are similar to each other and the protein repeats
are built from short and extremely serine-rich motifs, while Bombyx sericin genes are diversified and encode proteins
with long and complex repeats. Developmental changes in sericin properties
are controlled at the level of gene expression and splicing. In Galleria, MG-1 sericin is produced throughout larval
life until the wandering stage, while the production of MG-2 and MG-3
reaches a peak during cocoon spinning