Abstract

Eurygaster integriceps Puton, commonly known as sunn pest, is a major pest of wheat in Northern Africa, the Middle East and Eastern Europe. This insect injects a prolyl endoprotease into the wheat, destroying the gluten. The purpose of this study was to clone the full length cDNA of the sunn pest prolyl endoprotease (spPEP) for expression in E. coli and to compare the amino acid sequence of the enzyme to other known PEPs in both phylogeny and potential tertiary structure. Sequence analysis shows that the 5ꞌ UTR contains several putative transcription factor binding sites for transcription factors known to be expressed in Drosophila that might be useful targets for inhibition of the enzyme. The spPEP was first identified as a prolyl endoprotease by Darkoh et al., 2010. The enzyme is a unique serine protease of the S9A family by way of its substrate recognition of the gluten proteins, which are greater than 30 kD in size. At 51% maximum identity to known PEPs, homology modeling using SWISS-MODEL, the porcine brain PEP (PDB: 2XWD) was selected in the database of known PEP structures, resulting in a predicted tertiary structure 99% identical to the porcine brain PEP structure. A Km for the recombinant spPEP was determined to be 210 ± 53 µM for the zGly-Pro-pNA substrate in 0.025 M ethanolamine, pH 8.5, containing 0.1 M NaCl at 37 °C with a turnover rate of 172 ± 47 µM Gly-Pro-pNA/s/µM of enzyme.

Highlights

  • Eurygaster integriceps Puton, commonly known as sunn pest, belongs to the order Hemiptera and family Scutelleridae

  • Feeding adults resulted in the highest yield of mRNA at 1.88 ng/μL with an A260/A280 ratio of 2.1. mRNA from each of the life stages was used as a template to generate the Rapid Amplification of cDNA Ends (RACE)-ready cDNA

  • RACE-ready cDNA with concentrations ranging from 62 ng/μL to 77 ng/μL and purity (A260/A280) from

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Summary

Introduction

Eurygaster integriceps Puton, commonly known as sunn pest, belongs to the order Hemiptera and family Scutelleridae. This true bug is considered a major pest of wheat crops in Northern Africa, the Middle. In addition to direct reduction in wheat crops during the life cycle of the bug, the sunn pest injects saliva containing hydrolytic and proteolytic enzymes into the grains during feeding. The salivary glutenase, characterized as a prolyl endoprotease (spPEP) by Darkoh et al [2], assists in penetration and pre-oral digestion of the grain contents by degrading the high molecular weight gluten proteins of the wheat. The enzyme was partially purified by Darkoh et al [2], exhibiting a Km of 65.3 ± 1.8 μM for the GlyPro-pNA substrate at pH 8,

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