cDNA Cloning and Nuclear Localization of the Circadian Neuropeptide Designated as Pigment-Dispersing Factor PDF in the Cricket Gryllus bimaculates
- 1 June 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 131 (6) , 895-903
- https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a003180
Abstract
Pigment-dispersing factor (PDF) was recently reported to be a principal circadatian neu-romodulator involved in transmitting circadian rhythms of daily locomotion in insects. In Drosophila, PDF functions in some of the neurons expressing the clock genes period, timeless, Clock, and cycle, and those clock genes in turn regulate pdf gene expression. In the present study, we cloned a cDNA encoding PDF in the brain of a nocturnal insect, the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus, and found that an isolated clone (310 bp) codes for an extraordinarily short precursor protein with no definite signal sequence, but anulear localization signal (NLS)-like sequence instead. The cricket PDF exhibits high sequences identity (78%94) and similarity (89–100%) to insect PDFs and also to crustacean β-PDH peptides. In the optic lobes of G. bimaculatus there are PDF-immunoreactive neurons in both the medulla and lamina neuropiles. Among the strongly immunoreactive lamina PDF neurons, on electron microscopy we identified cells exhibiting distinct staining that is not only cytoplasmic but also nuclear. When GFP-fused PDF precursor proteins were expressed in COS-7 cells, distinct translocation of the fusion protein into the nucleus was observed. This is the first finding of PDF peptide in the nucleus, which suggests a fundamental role of PDF peptide per se in the circadian clock systemKeywords
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