Dipetalogastin, a potent thrombin inhibitor from the blood‐sucking insect Dipetalogaster maximus
1999; Wiley; Volume: 266; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1046/j.1432-1327.1999.00895.x
ISSN1432-1033
AutoresKatrin Mende, Olga Petoukhova, Valentina Koulitchkova, Günter A. Schaub, Ute Lange, Roland Kaufmann, Götz Nowak,
Tópico(s)Insect Utilization and Effects
ResumoA cDNA coding for the thrombin inhibitor dipetalogastin has been isolated from a stomach library of Dipetalogaster maximus, a blood-sucking insect. The open reading frame of the cloned inhibitor cDNA codes for a protein of 344 amino-acid residues. Sequence analysis reveals the existence of three repeated homologous main regions, indicating that the inhibitor consists of three domains. Each domain shows a double-headed structure with an internal sequence homology like rhodniin, the thrombin inhibitor from the blood-sucking insect Rhodnius prolixus. Peptide sequence comparisons of the deduced amino-acid sequence exhibit a high homology of the domains I and II to the natural inhibitor dipetalogastin from the stomach content of D. maximus and to rhodniin, respectively. Significant sequence similarities to Kazal-type inhibitors, like the conserved sequence CGXDXXTYXNXC and several cysteine residues, indicate that the thrombin inhibitor from D. maximus is a further blood-sucking insect which belongs to the Kazal-type family (besides rhodniin). A biologically active recombinant protein corresponding to domain II of the dipetalogastin cDNA was expressed in Escherichia coli. The isolated recombinant dipetalogastin with a molecular mass of 12.91 kDa has proved to be a specific thrombin inhibitor similar to its natural counterpart as well as rhodniin and hirudin. The Ki value of the recombinant dipetalogastin was determined to be 49.3 +/- 22.28 fM.
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