© 2006 The Japanese Biochemical Society.
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A Novel 96-kDa Aminopeptidase Localized on Epithelial Cell Membranes of Bombyx mori Midgut, Which Binds to Cry1Ac Toxin of Bacillus thuringiensis
1 Laboratory of Applied Biotechnology, Graduate School of Science and Technology, Niigata University, Niigata 950-2181; 2 Insect Pathology Laboratory, Department of Insect Genetics and Evolution, National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, Tsukuba 305-8634, Ibaraki; and 3 Laboratory of Molecular Mechanism of Bio-Interaction, Graduate School of Bio-Application and Systems Engineering, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Tokyo 184-8588
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Phone/Fax: +81 025 262 7637, E-mail: hide-hri{at}gs.niigata-u.ac.jp
Proteins in the brush border membrane (BBM) of the midgut binding to the insecticidal Cry1Ac toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis were investigated to examine the lower sensitivity of Bombyx mori to Cry1Ac, and new aminopeptidase N that bound to Cry1Ac was discovered. DEAE chromatography of Triton X-100soluble BBM proteins from the midgut revealed 96-kDa aminopeptidase that bound to Cry1Ac. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity and estimated to be a 96.4-kDa molecule on a silver-stained SDS-PAGE gel. However, the native protein was eluted as a single peak corresponding to
190-kDa on gel filtration and gave a single band on native PAGE. The enzyme was determined to be an aminopeptidase N (APN96) from its substrate specificity. Antiserum to class 3 B. mori APN (BmAPN3) recognized APN96, but peptide mass fingerprinting revealed that 54% of the amino acids of matched peptides were identical to those of BmAPN3, suggesting that APN96 was a novel isoform of the APN3 family. On ligand blots, APN96 bound to Cry1Ac but not Cry1Aa or Cry1Ab, and the interaction was inhibited by GalNAc. KD of the APN96Cry1Ac interaction was determined to be 1.83 ± 0.95 µM. The lectin binding assay suggested that APN96 had an N-linked bi-antennal oligosaccharide or an O-linked mucin type one. The role of APN96 was discussed in relation to the insensitivity of B. mori to Cry1Ac.
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