Abstract

The degradation of synthetic Manduca sexta allatostatin (Manse-AS) and allatotropin (Manse-AT) by enzymes associated with the corpus allatum (CA) of larvae of the tomato moth, Lacanobia oleracea, was investigated using reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation-time of flight mass spectrometry. Manduca sexta allatostatin was metabolised by CA extract to Manse-AS5-15, Manse-AS6-15, and Manse-AS7-15, which indicates enzymic cleavage at the C-terminal side of arginine residues R3 and R5 and the N-terminal side of R5, suggesting this is due to a trypsin-like enzyme. In support of this, the same degradation products were identified after Manse-AS was incubated with trypsin, and CA enzymic activity could be inhibited up to 79% by aprotinin. Degradation of Manse-AT by CA extract was also trypsin-like, cleaving at the C-terminal side of the basic residues K3 and R11 to produce Manse-AT4-13 and Manse-AT1-11. Metabolism by trypsin produced the same deletion peptides, but the major product due to this enzyme was Manse-AT4-11. Hydrolysis of Manse-AT by CA could only be partially inhibited by high doses of aprotinin (36%), and the CA extract also cleaved Manse-AT between M8 and T9 to produce Manse-AT1-8. A trypsin-like peptidase appears to be the major enzyme present in the CA of larval L. oleracea that acts to metabolise Manse-AS and Manse-AT. In addition, an unidentified enzyme that cleaves between M and T residues degraded Manse-AT.

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