Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 274, Issue 17, 23 April 1999, Pages 11854-11858
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PROTEIN CHEMISTRY AND STRUCTURE
A Pattern Recognition Protein for Peptidoglycan: CLONING THE cDNA AND THE GENE OF THE SILKWORM, BOMBYX MORI *

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Peptidoglycan recognition protein (PGRP) specifically binds to peptidoglycan and is considered to be one of the pattern recognition proteins in the innate immunity of insect. The PGRP is an essential component for peptidoglycan to trigger the prophenoloxidase cascade that is now recognized to be an important insect defense mechanism. We cloned cDNA encoding PGRP from the silkworm fat body cDNA library. Northern blot analysis showed that the PGRP gene is constitutively expressed in the fat body, epithelial cell, and hemocytes of naive silkworms. Furthermore, a bacterial challenge intensified the gene expression, with the maximal period being from 6 to 36 h after infection. The upstream sequence of the cloned PGRP gene was shown to contain putativecis-regulatory elements similar to the NF-κB-like element, interferon-response half-element, and GATA motif element, which have been found in the promoters of the acute phase protein genes of mammals and insects. A homology search revealed that the homologs of silkworm PGRP are present in mice, nematodes, and bacteriophages. This suggests that the recognition of peptidoglycan as foreign is effected in both vertebrates and invertebrates by PGRP homologs with an evolutionally common origin.

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*

This work was supported in part by Research Grants 07740641, 09265201, and 09304075 from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

The nucleotide sequence(s) reported in this paper has been submitted to the GenBank™/EMBL Data Bank with accession number(s) AB016249 and AB016605.