An extraovarian protein accumulated in mosquito oocytes is a carboxypeptidase activated in embryos

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Abstract

We report a phenomenon previously unknown for oviparous animals; in Aedes aegypti mosquitoes a serine carboxypeptidase is synthesized extraovarially and then internalized by oocytes. The cDNA encoding mosquito vitellogenic carboxypeptidase (VCP) was cloned and sequenced. The VCP cDNA hybridizes to a 1.5-kilobase mRNA present only in the fat body of vitellogenic females. The deduced amino acid sequence of VCP shares significant homology with members of the serine carboxypeptidase family. Binding assays using a serine protease inhibitor, [3H]diisopropyl fluorophosphate, showed that VCP is activated in eggs at the onset of embryonic development. Activation of VCP is associated with the reduction in its size from 53 kDa (inactive proenzyme) to 48 kDa (active enzyme). The active, 48-kDa, form of VCP is maximally present at the middle of embryonic development and disappears by the end. (.

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Cho, W. L., Deitsch, K. W., & Raikhel, A. S. (1991). An extraovarian protein accumulated in mosquito oocytes is a carboxypeptidase activated in embryos. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 88(23), 10821–10824. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.23.10821

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