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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A new type of antimicrobial peptide, snakin-1 (SN1), has been isolated from potato tubers and found to be active, at concentrations < 10 microM, against bacterial and fungal pathogens from potato and other plant species. The action of SN1 and potato
defensin
PTH1 was synergistic against the bacterium Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus and additive against the fungus Botrytis cinerea. Snakin-1 causes aggregation of both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. The peptide has 63 amino acid residues (M(r) 6,922), 12 of which are cysteines, and is unrelated to any previously isolated protein, although it is homologous to amino acid sequences deduced from cloned cDNAs that encode gibberellin-inducible mRNAs and has some sequence motifs in common with kistrin and other hemotoxic snake venoms. A degenerate oligonucleotide probe based on the internal sequence CCEECKC has been used to clone an SN1 cDNA. With the cDNA used as probe, one copy of the StSN1 gene per haploid genome has been estimated and expression of the gene has been detected in tubers, stems, axillary buds, and young floral buds. Expression levels in petals and carpels from fully developed flowers were much higher than in sepals and stamens. The expression pattern of gene StSN1 suggests that protein SN1 may be a component of constitutive defense barriers, especially those of storage and reproductive plant organs.
Mol
Plant Microbe Interact 1999 Jan
PMID:Snakin-1, a peptide from potato that is active against plant pathogens. 988 89
Injection of low doses of bacteria into the aquatic larvae of the dipteran insect Chironomus plumosus induces the appearance in their hemolymph of a potent antibacterial activity. We have isolated two 36-residue peptides from this hemolymph which are active against Gram-positive bacteria. The peptides are novel members of the insect
defensin
family and their sequences present marked differences with those of insect defensins isolated from other dipteran species. We have developed a method for efficient renaturation of this cysteine-rich molecule and obtained a highly pure synthetic Chironomus
defensin
.
Insect Biochem
Mol
Biol 1998 Dec
PMID:Isolation, characterization and chemical synthesis of a new insect defensin from Chironomus plumosus (Diptera). 988 20
Aedes aegypti were immune activated by injection with bacteria, and the expression of insect defensins was measured over time. Northern analyses indicated that
defensin
transcriptional activity continued for at least 21 days after bacterial injection, and up to 10 days after saline inoculation. Mature
defensin
levels in the haemolymph reached approximately 45 microM at 24 h post inoculation. cDNAs encoding the preprodefensins of three previously described mature Ae. aegypti defensins were amplified by PCR, cloned and sequenced. Genomic clones were amplified using primers designed against the cDNA sequence. Sequence comparison indicates that there is significant inter- and intra-isoform variability in the signal peptide and prodefensin sequences of
defensin
genes. Preprodefensin sequences of isoforms A and B are very similar, consisting of a signal peptide region of twenty amino acids, a prodefensin region of thirty-eight amino acids and a forty amino acid mature peptide domain. The sequence encoding isoform C is significantly different, comprising a signal peptide region of twenty-three amino acids, a prodefensin region of thirty-six amino acids, and the mature protein domain of forty amino acids. Analysis of the genomic clones of each isoform revealed one intron spatially conserved in the prodefensin region of all sequences. The intron in isoforms A and B is 64 nt long, and except for a 4 nt substitution in one clone, these intron sequences are identical. The intron in isoform C is 76 nt long and does not share significant identity with the intron sequences of isoforms A or B. The
defensin
gene mapped to chromosome 3, between two known loci, blt and LF168.
Insect
Mol
Biol 1999 Feb
PMID:Insect immunity: molecular cloning, expression, and characterization of cDNAs and genomic DNA encoding three isoforms of insect defensin in Aedes aegypti. 992 79
An Aedes aegypti mosquito cell line, Aag-2, exhibits a response to immune stimulation that is qualitatively similar to that of C7-10 cultured cells from the related mosquito, Aedes albopictus. Using SDS polyacrylamide gels, we found that a small peptide was preferentially induced by the treatment of growing cells with heat-killed, Gram-positive bacteria. By an analogy with other studies, this small peptide was postulated to be a member of the
defensin
family of insect immunity peptides. A differential display was used to obtain partial polymerase chain reaction products corresponding to mRNAs that were preferentially expressed in induced cells. One of these products, which contained the partial sequence of a
defensin
gene, was used to screen cDNA libraries from Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus cells. From Ae. aegypti cells, we found two previously described isoforms (A1 and A4) of mosquito
defensin
A, as well as a new isoform which we defined as A5. From Ae. albopictus cells, we found a new mature mosquito
defensin
, named D, which contains proline and isoleucine as the final amino acids. In both Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus cell lines, the expression of
defensin
mRNA was visible on Northern blots as early as 3 h after exposure to heat-killed bacteria, and
defensin
mRNA abundance was maximal at 12-36 h after induction.
Insect
Mol
Biol 1999 Aug
PMID:Immunity proteins from mosquito cell lines include three defensin A isoforms from Aedes aegypti and a defensin D from Aedes albopictus. 1046 48
The anthracnose fungus, Colletotrichum gloeosporioides, interacts incompatibly with the ripe fruit of pepper (Capsicum annuum). It interacts compatibly with the unripe-mature fruit. We isolated a
defensin
gene, jl-l, and a thionin-like gene, PepThi, expressed in the incompatible interaction by using an mRNA differential display method. Both genes were developmentally regulated during fruit ripening, organ-specifically regulated, and differentially induced during the compatible and incompatible interactions. Expression of the PepThi gene was rapidly induced in the incompatible-ripe fruit upon fungal infection. The fungus-inducible PepThi gene is highly inducible only in the unripe fruit by salicylic acid. In both ripe and unripe fruit, it was induced by wounding, but not by jasmonic acid. Expression of the jl-l gene is enhanced by jasmonic acid in the unripe fruit but suppressed in the ripe fruit. These results suggest that both small and cysteine-rich protein genes are induced via different signal transduction pathways during fruit ripening to protect the reproductive organs against biotic and abiotic stresses.
Plant
Mol
Biol 1999 Oct
PMID:Coexpression of a defensin gene and a thionin-like via different signal transduction pathways in pepper and Colletotrichum gloeosporioides interactions. 1059 99
Secretory leukocyte proteinase inhibitor (SLPI) is a serine proteinase inhibitor that is produced locally in the lung by cells of the submucosal bronchial glands and by nonciliated epithelial cells. Its main function appears to be the inhibition of neutrophil elastase (NE). Recently, NE was found to enhance SLPI mRNA levels while decreasing SLPI protein release in airway epithelial cells. Furthermore, glucocorticoids were shown to increase both constitutive and NE-induced SLPI mRNA levels. In addition to NE, stimulated neutrophils also release alpha-defensins. Defensins are small, antimicrobial polypeptides that are found in high concentrations in purulent secretions of patients with chronic airway inflammation. Like NE, defensins induce interleukin-8 production in airway epithelial cells. This induction is sensitive to inhibition by the glucocorticoid dexamethasone and is prevented in the presence of alpha(1)-proteinase inhibitor. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of defensins on the production of SLPI and the related NE inhibitor elafin/SKALP in primary bronchial epithelial cells (PBECs). Defensins significantly increase SLPI protein release by PBECs in a time- and dose-dependent fashion without affecting SLPI mRNA synthesis. In the presence of alpha(1)-proteinase inhibitor, the
defensin
-induced SLPI protein release is further enhanced, but no effect was observed on SLPI mRNA levels. Dexamethasone did not affect SLPI protein release from control or
defensin
-treated PBECs. In addition, we observed a constitutive release of elafin/SKALP by PBECs, but this was not affected by defensins. The present results suggest a role for defensins in the dynamic regulation of the antiproteinase screen in the lung at sites of inflammation.
Am J Physiol Lung Cell
Mol
Physiol 2000 Jan
PMID:Regulation of SLPI and elafin release from bronchial epithelial cells by neutrophil defensins. 1064 90
Dm-AMP1, an antifungal plant
defensin
from seeds of dahlia (Dahlia merckii), was radioactively labeled with t-butoxycarbonyl-[35S]-L-methionine N-hydroxy-succinimi-dylester. This procedure yielded a 35S-labeled peptide with unaltered antifungal activity. [35S]Dm-AMP1 was used to assess binding on living cells of the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa and the unicellular fungus Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Binding of [35S]Dm-AMP1 to fungal cells was saturable and could be competed for by preincubation with excess, unlabeled Dm-AMP1 as well as with Ah-AMP1 and Ct-AMP1, two plant defensins that are highly homologous to Dm-AMP1. In contrast, binding could not be competed for by more distantly related plant defensins or structurally unrelated antimicrobial peptides. Binding of [35S]Dm-AMP1 to either N. crassa or S. cerevisiae cells was apparently irreversible. In addition, whole cells and microsomal membrane fractions from two independently obtained S. cerevisiae mutants selected for resistance to Dm-AMP1 exhibited severely reduced binding affinity for [35S]Dm-AMP1, compared with wild-type yeast. This finding suggests that binding of Dm-AMP1 to S. cerevisiae plasma membranes is required for antifungal activity of this protein.
Mol
Plant Microbe Interact 2000 Jan
PMID:Specific binding sites for an antifungal plant defensin from Dahlia (Dahlia merckii) on fungal cells are required for antifungal activity. 1065 85
The
defensin
gene from the mosquito, Anopheles gambiae, is present as a single copy per haploid genome. Two exons, encoding a 102 residue preprodefensin, are separated by a 105 bp intron bounded by consensus splice sites. The upstream regulatory sequence includes a TATA box, arthropod initiator and numerous motifs homologous to insect and mammalian immune response elements. This promoter is capable of upregulation by immune challenge in cultured cells and activity is further stimulated by Gambif1, a mosquito Rel protein known to translocate to the nucleus and bind NF-kappa B sites in target promoters. Activity is inhibited by p50, a mammalian Rel protein that competitively binds NF-kappa B sites, and virtually abolished by p40, an avian I kappa B protein that inhibits nuclear translocation.
Insect
Mol
Biol 2000 Oct
PMID:Genomic organization and immune regulation of the defensin gene from the mosquito, Anopheles gambiae. 1102 66
Wolbachia are intracellular maternally inherited microorganisms that are associated with reproductive abnormalities such as cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), feminization and parthenogenesis in the various arthropod species they infect. Surveys indicate that these bacteria infect more than 16% of all insect species as well as isopods, mites and nematodes, making Wolbachia one of the most ubiquitous parasites yet described. However, nothing is known about the interactions of this bacterium with the host's immune system. We studied the expression of inducible antimicrobial markers in the adults of two Wolbachia infected insect species, Drosophila simulans and Aedes albopictus. The lack of available immune markers in the mosquito species led us to clone part of the
defensin
gene from this species, which was found to be very similar to the other mosquito defensins cloned from Anopheles gambiae and Aedes aegypti. Comparisons of the expression pattern of the antibacterial markers between Wolbachia-infected and cured lines, and also between bacteria-challenged and unchallenged adults indicated that Wolbachia does not either constitutively induce or suppress the transcription of these antibacterial genes. In addition, no difference in the transcription of these genes was found between double and single Wolbachia-infected strains or between strains in which Wolbachia has different tissue tropisms.
Insect
Mol
Biol 2000 Dec
PMID:Wolbachia neither induces nor suppresses transcripts encoding antimicrobial peptides. 1112 72
A recombinant Anopheles gambiae
defensin
peptide was used to define the antimicrobial activity spectrum against bacteria, filamentous fungi and yeast. Results showed that most of the Gram-positive bacterial species tested were sensitive to the recombinant peptide in a range of concentrations from 0.1 to 0.75 microM. No activity was detected against Gram-negative bacteria, with the exception of some E. coli strains. Growth inhibitory activity was detected against some species of filamentous fungi. Defensin was not active against yeast. The kinetics of bactericidal and fungicidal effects were determined for Micrococcus luteus and Neurospora crassa, respectively. Differential mass spectrometry analysis was used to demonstrate induction of
defensin
in the hemolymph of bacteria-infected adult female mosquitoes. Native peptide levels were quantitated in both hemolymph and midgut tissues. The polytene chromosome position of the
defensin
locus was mapped by in situ hybridization.
Insect Biochem
Mol
Biol 2001 Mar 01
PMID:The defensin peptide of the malaria vector mosquito Anopheles gambiae: antimicrobial activities and expression in adult mosquitoes. 1116 93
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