Abstract

BackgroundInsect odorant binding proteins (OBPs) and chemosensory proteins (CSPs) play an important role in chemical communication of insects. Gene discovery of these proteins is a time-consuming task. In recent years, expressed sequence tags (ESTs) of many insect species have accumulated, thus providing a useful resource for gene discovery.ResultsWe have developed a computational pipeline to identify OBP and CSP genes from insect ESTs. In total, 752,841 insect ESTs were examined from 54 species covering eight Orders of Insecta. From these ESTs, 142 OBPs and 177 CSPs were identified, of which 117 OBPs and 129 CSPs are new. The complete open reading frames (ORFs) of 88 OBPs and 123 CSPs were obtained by electronic elongation. We randomly chose 26 OBPs from eight species of insects, and 21 CSPs from four species for RT-PCR validation. Twenty two OBPs and 16 CSPs were confirmed by RT-PCR, proving the efficiency and reliability of the algorithm. Together with all family members obtained from the NCBI (OBPs) or the UniProtKB (CSPs), 850 OBPs and 237 CSPs were analyzed for their structural characteristics and evolutionary relationship.ConclusionsA large number of new OBPs and CSPs were found, providing the basis for deeper understanding of these proteins. In addition, the conserved motif and evolutionary analysis provide some new insights into the evolution of insect OBPs and CSPs. Motif pattern fine-tune the functions of OBPs and CSPs, leading to the minor difference in binding sex pheromone or plant volatiles in different insect Orders.

Highlights

  • Insect odorant binding proteins (OBPs) and chemosensory proteins (CSPs) play an important role in chemical communication of insects

  • It was believed that pheromones and other odors entering the aqueous lumen of chemosensilla, were transported by OBPs to transmembrane odorant receptors (ORs) [1,2] and

  • The expressed sequence tags (ESTs) are from 54 insect species that cover eight Orders of Insecta

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Summary

Introduction

Insect odorant binding proteins (OBPs) and chemosensory proteins (CSPs) play an important role in chemical communication of insects. Gene discovery of these proteins is a timeconsuming task. Insect odorant binding proteins (OBPs) play an important role in insect chemical communication. A typical feature of OBPs is the presence of six positional conserved cysteines These six cysteines form three disulfide bridges, which play important roles in maintaining the protein tertiary structure. Another essential criterion is an acceptable similarity in protein sequence (e-value of BLAST analysis) with other family members. CSPs have only four conserved cysteines linked by disulfide bridges between neighboring residues [10] and are better conserved than OBPs across species [11]

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