Abstract
SDS-PAGE of the sweet potato whitefly (Bemisia tabaci) egg extract showed one major band (approximately 190 kDa) and two minor bands (approximately 75 kDa and 67 kDa). A distinct 190 kDa band was also present in male extract. On SDS gels the vitellin band of the greenhouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporarium) was larger, about 220 kDa. The native molecular mass of sweet potato whitefly vitellin was estimated to be 375 kDa using 4-20% native porelimiting gel electrophoresis. Its isoelectric point was estimated to be 7.3 using isoelectric focusing. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and densitometry were used to estimate vitellin subunit composition; the data suggest that the sweet potato whitefly vitellin is likely to be a 380 kDa native molecule formed by two 190 kDa subunits. The two minor bands (75 kDa and 67 kDa) may be breakdown products of the native vitellin. This conclusion was supported by a Western blot of an SDS-PAGE gel of partially degraded female and egg extracts, which showed that polyclonal antiserum raised against the 190 kDa polypeptide recognized the 75 kDa and 67 kDa bands. Seven hybridoma cell lines secreting monoclonal antibodies against the 190 kDa band were screened, and one of them (S1A2G9H2) was mass produced. The antibody recognized the 190 kDa band in a Western blot. All the screened monoclonal antibodies were female and egg-specific by ELISA and/or Western blot, suggesting that the 190 kDa band in male extract was not a vitellin. A sensitive ELISA was established that could detect as little as 1/40 of an egg equivalent of vitellin using the monoclonal antibody from S1A2G9H2. Profiles of female sweet potato whitefly reproductive activities (egg laying, amount of vitellin in the female, and total vitellin produced by a female) within 2 days after eclosion were determined. Arch. Insect Biochem.
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