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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 266, Issue 18, 11510-11517, 06, 1991
GH Gudmundsson, DA Lidholm, B Asling, R Gan and HG Boman
Cecropins A, B, and D are antibacterial peptides of 35-37 amino acids that
are synthesized in pupae of the Cecropia moth (Hyalophora cecropia) as a
response to a bacterial infection. cDNA cloning has shown that the
cecropins are made as preproproteins that are processed in four steps to
the mature peptides. We have now cloned the genes for preprocecropins A and
D, data that together with earlier work on the B gene has made it possible
to deduce the arrangement of the cecropin locus. The genes for the three
cecropins are organized in a large cluster spanning 20 kilobases of DNA and
for each gene there is one copy/haploid genome. The size of the cluster is
in part due to long distances between the genes and to the presence of
insertion elements in the introns of the A and D genes. The cecropin genes
are not expressed in parallel. Transcripts for cecropins A and B appear
within 2 h after injection of live bacteria, they reach a maximum after 48
h, and they are continuously expressed at this level for several days. The
D gene has a delayed pattern of expression where transcripts appear within
48-96 h and reach a maximum after 144 h. In consonance is also the
production of the mature cecropins A, B, and D where the active cecropins A
and B are detected in the hemolymph within 10-24 h while the D form is not
detected until 48 h post infection. Control injections with sterile saline
produced only a weak induction of the cecropin genes.
The cecropin locus. Cloning and expression of a gene cluster encoding three antibacterial peptides in Hyalophora cecropia
Department of Microbiology, University of Stockholm, Sweden.
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