Abstract

The hemolymph chymotrypsin inhibitor b1 (CIb1) of silkworm, Bombyx mori, plays an important role in innate immunity. In order to study its encoding gene CIb1, five heterogeneous promoter fragments of 844 bp, 682 bp, 516 bp, 312 bp and 82 bp in length were cloned from genomic DNA of the p50 silkworm strain. Characterization of the CIb1 promoter was performed in vitro using the firefly luciferase gene as reporter. The results showed that CIb1 promoter fragments have transcription activities in the B. mori ovary-derived BmN cell line. The 82 bp fragment (-72 to +10 nt) containing the eukaryotic core promoter elements revealed a basic transcription activity. The Bm1 element, upstream the transcription initiation site, showed a positive regulation function to the CIb1 promoter. CIb1 promoter-like fragments from the genomic DNA of the tetra hybrid silkworm SujuxMinghu provided a natural deletion model for the study of the CIb1 promoter. In vitro analysis indicated that the 132 bp fragment from -517 nt to -386 nt upstream of the transcription initiation site strongly suppressed the transcription activity of the CIb1 promoter, suggesting that the 132 bp fragment harbours strong negative cis-acting elements. Infection of Bombyx mori nucleopolyhedrovirus (BmNPV) increased the activity of the CIb1 promoter, having provided another evidence to the function of CIb1 in the innate immunity of silkworm.

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