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Browsing by Author "He, J.G."

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    Characterization of a novel cellular retinoic acid/retinol binding protein from shrimp: expression of the recombinant protein for immunohistochemical detection and binding assay
    (Elsevier/North-Holland, 2002) Gu, P.L.; Gunawardene, Y.I.N.S.; Chow, B.C.; He, J.G.; Chan, S.M.
    Members of the cellular retinoic acid (CRABP) and retinol binding (CRBP) proteins family are involved in the metabolic pathways of retinoic acid (RA) and retinal respectively. The objective of this study is to determine whether such proteins are present in crustaceans. We report here the cloning and isolation of a novel complementary DNA (cDNA) that showed characteristics of the CRABP/CRBP from the ovary and eyestalk of the shrimp. The cDNA is 0.9 Kb in size and the deduced shrimp protein is encoded for a protein of 14 kDa. Although it shows high amino acids sequence similarity to both the vertebrate and invertebrate CRABP, some conserved amino acids identified in other CRABPs were not found in MeCRABP. MeCRABP is expressed in the ovary, eyestalk, testis, epidermis and early larvae. The presence of MeCRABP in early larval stages suggests that the protein may be involved in the early larval development. Recombinant MeCRABP was produced and used to generate a polyclonal antibody. In theimmunohistochemical detection study, anti-rCRABP antibody recognized the presence of CRABP in several cell types of the eyestalk as well as the smaller oocytes of the ovary. Although MeCRABP messenger RNA transcripts can be detected in the ovary throughout the ovarian maturation period, CRABP was detected only in the primary oocytes of the ovary. The results suggest that CRABP transcripts in the mature ovary are not translated and may be supplied to the oocyte as maternal messages. The binding property of the recombinant MeCRABP was also tested by a fluorometeric method. The result indicates that rMeCRABP binds to both RA and retinal with similar affinity. This study represents the first cloning andcharacterization of a cDNA that belongs to a member of retinoid/fatty acid binding protein family in crustaceans.
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    The Shrimp FAMeT cDNA is encoded for a putative enzyme involved in the methyl farnesoate (MF) biosynthetic pathway and is temporally expressed in the eyestalk of different sexes
    (Elsevier, 2001) Gunawardene, Y.I.N.S.; Chow, B.K.C; He, J.G.; Chan, S.M.
    Methylfarnesoate (MF), an analogue of the insect juvenile hormone III, has been implicated to play a vital role in the regulation of the growth and reproductive development in crustaceans. Farnesoic acid O-methyltransferase (FAMeT) is the key enzyme involved in catalyzing the final step in the MF biosynthetic pathway. In this study, we report the cloning and characterization of the cDNA encoding the putative FAMeT of the shrimp Metapenaeus ensis. FAMeT comprises 280 amino acid residues with a predicted molecular weight of 32kDa. The predicted putative FAMeT protein reveals a high degree of structural conservation of FAMeT with the lobsters. It shares 79 and 70% sequence identities with the putative FAMeTs of Homarus americanus and Panulirus interruptus, respectively. As revealed by the Southern blot analysis and genomic PCR, only one gene exists in the shrimp genome and the gene is uninterrupted in the coding region. The shrimp FAMeT mRNA is widely distributed in many tissues with the highest expression level observed in the central nervous system. A constant level of FAMeT expression is recorded in the ventral nerve cord of the juveniles and the mature females during the reproductive cycle. Unlike the ventral nerve cord, the eyestalk of the juvenile male, but not the female, expresses FAMeT. Further study shows that the eyestalk of the mature female expresses FAMeT during all stages of ovarian maturation. We speculate that FAMeT may be important for the regulation of eyestalk neuropeptides. This is the first extensive study on the molecular characterization, structural analysis and expression of the crustacean FAMeT.

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