A transgene reporter consisting of the bombyxin gene promoter and the green fluorescent protein coding region was introduced into intact brains of the silkworm Bombyx mori by in vitro electroporation. After in vitro culture of the brains, the fluorescence derived from the introduced reporter gene was observed in all cases in eight neurosecretory cells that had previously been identified as bombyxin-producing cells (BPCs). Although the fluorescence was not always observed in all cells, it was specific to BPCs, indicating that the reporter was under the control of the bombyxin gene promoter in a BPC-specific manner. Electroporatical introduction of a reporter gene was therefore found to be a suitable method for analyzing cell-specific expression in intact tissues and to be substitute for germ-line transmission of reporters in the transgenic system. Application of this technique enables us to analyze the cell-specific expression of transgene reporters within a few days and treat more than several dozens of the reporters within 1 month, which is difficult to do with the transgenic system.
Bombyxin F1 gene, a new bombyxin family gene, has been identified. The F1 gene forms a pair with bombyxin B10 gene with an opposite transcriptional orientation and the gene pair F1/B10 is located between bombyxin gene pairs B9/C1 and A7/B7 in a bombyxin gene cluster. The nucleotide sequence of the F1 gene and its deduced amino acid sequence deviate moderately from those characterized previously for the family-A, family-B, family-C, family-D, and family-E bombyxin genes; the bombyxin F1 gene and preprobombyxin F1 share no more than 62% and 53% sequence identities with other bombyxin members, respectively. Harr-plot analysis indicated that the spacer of the F1/B10 gene pair has low sequence similarity with that of other bombyxin gene pairs characterized. The bombyxin F1 mRNA in Bombyx mori brain was shown to locate in four pairs of medial neurosecretory cells, which also produce other bombyxin family mRNAs. Genomic Southern hybridization indicated that the Bombyx haploid genome contains a single copy of the family-F bombyxin gene.
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