We have identified, cloned and expressed a new chemosensory protein (CSP) in the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria belonging to a third sub-class of these polypeptides. Polyclonal antibodies stained a band of 14 kDa, as expected, in the extracts of antennae and palps of the adults, but not in the 4th and 5th instars. In the related species Locusta migratoria, instead, the same antibodies cross-reacted only with a band of apparent molecular mass of 35 kDa in the extract of 1st-5th instars, but not in the adults. The recombinant protein binds the fluorescent probe N-phenyl-1-naphthylamine, but none of the compounds so far reported as pheromones for S. gregaria. The expression of the odorant-binding protein (OBP) and of CSPs of sub-classes I and II was also monitored in antennae, tarsi, palpi, wings and other organs of solitary and gregarious locusts in their nymphal and adult stages. OBP was found to be antenna specific, where it is expressed at least from the 3rd instar in both solitary and gregarious locusts. CSPs, instead, appear to be more ubiquitous, with different expression patterns, according to the sub-class. Immunocytochemistry experiments revealed that OBP is present in the sensillum lymph of sensilla trichodea and basiconica, while CSP-I and CSP-III were found in the outer sensillum lymph of sensilla chaetica and in the sub-cuticular space between epidermis and cuticle of the antenna. Sensilla chaetica on other parts of the body showed the same expression of CSP-I as those on the antenna.
Iron is one of the essential micronutrients required by all living organisms. In this study, we isolated a gene encoding putative citrate synthase (CS) from Malus xiaojinensis, designated as MxCS1. The MxCS1 gene encodes a protein of 473 amino acid residues with a predicted molecular mass of 52.5 kDa and a theoretical isoelectric point of 8.67. The expression of MxCS1 was enriched in the leaf rather than in phloem and root, however, its expression was hardly detected in the xylem. The gene expression was strongly induced by Fe stress treatment in the M. xiaojinensis seedlings. Over-expression of MxCS1 improved Fe deficiency tolerance in transgenic Arabidopsis. We argued that MxCS1 is a new member of the CS genes, and it may function as a regulator in response to iron stress in plants.
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