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Title: An abundantly expressed hemolymph glycoprotein isolated from newly parasitized Manduca sexta larvae is a polydnavirus gene product. Author: Harwood SH, Grosovsky AJ, Cowles EA, Davis JW, Beckage NE. Journal: Virology; 1994 Dec; 205(2):381-92. PubMed ID: 7975242. Abstract: Cotesia congregata polydnavirus (CcPDV) is essential for successful parasitism of Manduca sexta larvae by the braconid wasp C. congregata. CcPDV virions are present in large numbers in the oviducts of C. congregata and injected with eggs into the hemocoel of M. sexta larvae during parasitization. Injection of sucrose density purified virions into nonparasitized larvae causes several of the parasitism-induced alterations in the physiology of host larvae that occur as a result of natural parasitism, including the synthesis of novel hemolymph proteins and abrogation of the host's immune response against the developing parasites. One of these proteins, early-expressed protein 1 (EP1), is a 190-kDa molecule which constitutes up to 5% of the total hemolymph protein by 24 hr following oviposition by the wasp. Using N-terminal sequence data for EP1 to construct primers for use in the polymerase chain reaction, we amplified and cloned a cDNA corresponding to the gene encoding EP1. This cDNA hybridized to DNA of the CcPDV genome, but not to DNA isolated from M. sexta larvae, suggesting that EP1 is a CcPDV gene product. A cDNA clone was isolated from an expression library generated from RNA extracted from newly parasitized M. sexta larvae. Sequence analysis of the cDNA clone revealed the presence of an open reading frame of 819 bp encoding a protein of 30.7 kDa. In vitro transcription/translation of the cDNA clone produced a protein of approximately 31 kDa, which was immunoprecipitated by EP1-specific polyclonal antiserum generated against purified deglycosylated EP1. EP1-like sequences also were amplified from male wasp genomic DNA, suggestive of integration of EP1-like sequences in the genome. This report constitutes the first evidence that a specific protein isolated from a parasitized host insect is a wasp polydnavirus gene product.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]