Dottorini Tania, Nicolaides Lietta, Ranson Hilary, Rogers David W, Crisanti Andrea, Catteruccia Flaminia
Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale e Scienze Biochimiche, Università degli Studi di Perugia, Via Del Giochetto, 06122 Perugia, Italy.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Oct 9;104(41):16215-20. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0703904104. Epub 2007 Sep 27.
The male accessory glands (MAGs) of many insect species produce and secrete a number of reproductive proteins collectively named Acps. These proteins, many of which are rapidly evolving, are essential for male fertility and represent formidable modulators of female postmating behavior. Upon copulation, the transfer of Acps has been shown in Drosophila and other insects to trigger profound physiological and behavioral changes in females, including enhanced ovulation/oviposition and reduced mating receptivity. In Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes, the principal vectors of human malaria, experimental evidence clearly demonstrates a key role of MAG products in inducing female responses. However, no Acp has been experimentally identified to date in this or in any other mosquito species. In this study we report on the identification of 46 MAG genes from An. gambiae, 25 of which are male reproductive tract-specific. This was achieved through a combination of bioinformatics searches and manual annotation confirmed by transcriptional profiling. Among these genes are the homologues of 40% of the Drosophila Acps analyzed, including Acp70A, or sex peptide, which in the fruit fly is the principal modulator of female postmating behavior. Although many Anopheles Acps belong to the same functional classes reported for Drosophila, suggesting a conserved role for these proteins in mosquitoes, some represent novel lineage-specific Acps that may have evolved to perform functions relevant to Anopheles reproductive behavior. Our findings imply that the molecular basis of Anopheles female postmating responses can now be studied, opening novel avenues for the field control of these important vectors of human disease.
许多昆虫物种的雄性附腺(MAGs)会产生并分泌多种生殖蛋白,统称为Acps。这些蛋白中的许多都在快速进化,对雄性生育能力至关重要,并且是雌性交配后行为的强大调节因子。在果蝇和其他昆虫中,交配时Acps的转移已被证明会引发雌性体内深刻的生理和行为变化,包括增强排卵/产卵以及降低交配接受度。在人类疟疾的主要传播媒介冈比亚按蚊中,实验证据清楚地表明了雄性附腺产物在诱导雌性反应中的关键作用。然而,迄今为止,在这种或任何其他蚊子物种中尚未通过实验鉴定出Acp。在本研究中,我们报告了从冈比亚按蚊中鉴定出46个MAG基因,其中25个是雄性生殖道特异性的。这是通过生物信息学搜索和经转录谱分析确认的人工注释相结合实现的。在这些基因中,有40%是所分析的果蝇Acps的同源物,包括Acp70A或性肽,在果蝇中它是雌性交配后行为的主要调节因子。尽管许多按蚊Acps属于已报道的果蝇的相同功能类别,表明这些蛋白在蚊子中具有保守作用,但有些代表了新的谱系特异性Acps,可能已经进化以执行与按蚊生殖行为相关的功能。我们的发现意味着现在可以研究冈比亚按蚊雌性交配后反应的分子基础,为控制这些重要的人类疾病传播媒介开辟了新途径。