Organization and Potential Function of the mrjp3 Locus in Four Honeybee Species
- 7 September 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
- Vol. 53 (20) , 8075-8081
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jf051417x
Abstract
Royal jelly is a nutritious secretion produced by nurse honeybees to provision queens and growing larvae. Major proteins of royal jelly are mutually similar, and they all belong to the MRJP/yellow protein family (pfam03022). The mrjp3 loci in four traditional honeybee species (Apis mellifera, Apis cerana,Apis dorsata, and Apis florea) were sequenced and found to share high sequence and structural similarities. PCR analyses confirmed the presence of an extensive repetitive region, which showed size and sequence polymorphisms in all species. The evolutionary history of mrjp genes and their repetitive regions was reconstructed from their nucleotide sequences. The analyses proved that the repeat region appeared early in the evolution of the mrjp gene family and that the extreme elongation of the repeat is mrjp3 specific. In the MRJPs was documented a correlation between nitrogen content and repeat length. Therefore, it is argued that the repeat occurred due to a selection for an increase in nitrogen storage for a more efficient nutrition of queens and larvae.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Towards royal jelly proteomeProteomics, 2005
- Profiling the proteome complement of the secretion from hypopharyngeal gland of Africanized nurse-honeybees (Apis mellifera L.)Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2005
- Gene Amplification as a Developmental Strategy: Isolation of Two Developmental Amplicons in DrosophilaDevelopmental Cell, 2004
- Characterization of Royal Jelly Proteins in both Africanized and European Honeybees (Apis mellifera) by Two-Dimensional Gel ElectrophoresisJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2003
- Honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) mrjp gene family: computational analysis of putative promoters and genomic structure of mrjp1, the gene coding for the most abundant protein of larval foodGene, 2003
- Protein Repeats: Structures, Functions, and EvolutionJournal of Structural Biology, 2001
- Analysis of Drosophila yellow-B cDNA Reveals a New Family of Proteins Related to the Royal Jelly Proteins in the Honeybee and to an Orphan Protein in an Unusual Bacterium Deinococcus radioduransBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2000
- Paternity analysis of worker honeybees using random amplified polymorphic DNAThe Science of Nature, 1993
- A simple method for displaying the hydropathic character of a proteinJournal of Molecular Biology, 1982
- Honey Bee NutritionAnnual Review of Entomology, 1970