Abstract

Odorant-binding proteins (OBPs), also named pheromone-binding proteins when the odorant is a pheromone, are essential for insect olfaction. They solubilize odorants that reach the port of entry of the olfactory system, the pore tubules in antennae and other olfactory appendages. Then, OBPs transport these hydrophobic compounds through an aqueous sensillar lymph to receptors embedded on dendritic membranes of olfactory receptor neurons. Structures of OBPs from mosquito species have shed new light on the mechanism of transport, although there is considerable debate on how they deliver odorant to receptors. An OBP from the southern house mosquito, Culex quinquefasciatus, binds the hydrophobic moiety of a mosquito oviposition pheromone (MOP) on the edge of its binding cavity. Likewise, it has been demonstrated that the orthologous protein from the malaria mosquito binds the insect repellent DEET on a similar edge of its binding pocket. A high school research project was aimed at testing whether the orthologous protein from the yellow fever mosquito, AaegOBP1, binds DEET and other insect repellents, and MOP was used as a positive control. Binding assays using the fluorescence reporter N-phenyl-1-naphtylamine (NPN) were inconclusive. However, titration of NPN fluorescence emission in AaegOBP1 solution with MOP led to unexpected and intriguing results. Quenching was observed in the initial phase of titration, but addition of higher doses of MOP led to a stepwise increase in fluorescence emission coupled with a blue shift, which can be explained at least in part by formation of MOP micelles to house stray NPN molecules.

Highlights

  • Over the past decade progress towards our understanding of the molecular basis of mosquito olfaction has been remarkable

  • In the course of this investigation, we found evidence suggesting that AaegOBP1 might bind simultaneously the fluorescence reporter and an odorant

  • Mosquito oviposition pheromone was used as a positive control

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past decade progress towards our understanding of the molecular basis of mosquito olfaction has been remarkable. It was not until the sunset of last century that odorant receptor (OR) genes have been identified in the genome of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster[1,2,3] and thereafter in mosquitoes and various insect species (see review4), and less than a decade since the unique topology of ORs, with an intracellular N-terminus and an extracellular C-terminus[5], has been elucidated. Elucidation of the three-dimensional (3D) structures of mosquito OBPs17–21 along with knockdown experiments[22,23] and binding assays[24,25,26,27] strongly suggest that these olfactory proteins are involved in the transport of odorant from the ports of entry of olfactory sensilla (the pore tubules) to ORs housed on dendritic membranes of olfactory receptor neurons

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