antimicrobial peptide evolution in the asiatic honey bee apis cerana抗菌肽在亚洲蜜蜂进化cerana api.pdf
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Antimicrobial Peptide Evolution in the Asiatic Honey Bee
Apis cerana
Peng Xu, Min Shi, Xue-xin Chen*
Institute of Insect Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
Abstract
The Asiatic honeybee, Apis cerana Fabricius, is an important honeybee species in Asian countries. It is still found in the wild,
but is also one of the few bee species that can be domesticated. It has acquired some genetic advantages and significantly
different biological characteristics compared with other Apis species. However, it has been less studied, and over the past
two decades, has become a threatened species in China. We designed primers for the sequences of the four antimicrobial
peptide cDNA gene families (abaecin, defensin, apidaecin, and hymenoptaecin) of the Western honeybee, Apis mellifera L.
and identified all the antimicrobial peptide cDNA genes in the Asiatic honeybee for the first time. All the sequences were
amplified by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). In all, 29 different defensin cDNA genes coding 7
different defensin peptides, 11 different abaecin cDNA genes coding 2 different abaecin peptides, 13 different apidaecin
cDNA genes coding 4 apidaecin peptides and 34 different hymenoptaecin cDNA genes coding 13 different hymenoptaecin
peptides were cloned and identified from the Asiatic honeybee adult workers. Detailed comparison of these four
antimicrobial peptide gene families with those of the Western honeybee revealed that there are many similarities in the
quantity and amino acid components of peptides in the abaecin, defensin and apidaecin families, while many more
hymenoptaecin peptides are found in the Asiatic honeybee than those in the Western honeybee (13 versus 1). The results
indicated that the Asiatic honeybee adult generated more va
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