Members of a family of drosophila putative odorant-binding proteins are expressed in different subsets of olfactory hairs

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Abstract

A polymerase chain reaction-based method was used to generate a Drosophila melanogaster antennal cDNA library from which head cDNAs were subtracted. We identified five cDNAs that code for antennal proteins containing six cysteines in a conserved pattern shared with known moth antennal proteins, including pheromone-binding proteins. Another cDNA codes for a protein related to vertebrate brain proteins that bind hydrophobic ligands. In all, we describe seven antennal proteins which contain potential signal peptides, suggesting that, like pheromone-binding proteins, they may be secreted in the lumen of olfactory hairs. The expression patterns of these putative odorant-binding proteins define at least four different subsets of olfactory hairs and suggest that the Drosophila olfactory apparatus is funnctionally segregated. © 1994.

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Pikielny, C. W., Hasan, G., Rouyer, F., & Rosbash, M. (1994). Members of a family of drosophila putative odorant-binding proteins are expressed in different subsets of olfactory hairs. Neuron, 12(1), 35–49. https://doi.org/10.1016/0896-6273(94)90150-3

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