Abstract

From the genomic DNA of the moth Samia cynthia ricini, we cloned and characterized six clustered genes that encode precursor molecules for peptides structurally related to bombyxin, a Bombyx mori brain secretory peptide that is structurally like insulin and functionally like the prothoracicotropic hormone. The precursor molecules deduced from these genes have the domain organization of signal peptide/B-chain/C-peptide/A-chain, as in preprobombyxins and preproinsulins. The Samia bombyxin-related peptide (SBRP) genes are classified into families A and B according to their sequence homology. Two genes belonging to different families are arranged close to each other to form a pair with opposite transcriptional orientations ( A-1 B-1 , A-2 B-2 , and A-3 B-3 ). None of these genes have introns, and gene B-3 has an in-frame stop codon representing a pseudogene. Four genes, A-1, A-3, B-1, and B-2, are expressed in Samia brain. Genomic Southern hybridization suggests that the Samia genome contains many other SBRP genes.

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