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1.
The innate immune response is a conserved trait shared by invertebratesand vertebrates. In crustaceans, circulating hemocytes playsignificant roles in the immune response, including the releaseof prophenoloxidases. Activated phenoloxidase (tyrosinase) participatesin encapsulation and melanization of foreign organisms as wellas sclerotization of the new exoskeleton after wound-repairor molting. Hemocyanin functions as a phenoloxidase under certainconditions and thus also participates in the immune responseand molting. The relative contributions of hemocyte phenoloxidaseand hemocyanin in the physiological ratio at which they occurin hemolymph have been investigated in the crab Cancer magister.Differences in activity, substrate affinity, and catalytic abilitybetween the two enzymes indicate that hemocytes are the predominantsource of phenoloxidase activity in crabs. In contrast, hemocyaninis the primary source of phenoloxidase activity in isopods andchelicerates whose hemocytes show no phenoloxidase activity.Quantitative PCR studies on the distribution of prophenoloxidasemRNA in the tissues of Carcinus maenas showed little effectrelative to salinity stress. Phylogenetic analysis of hemocyanin,phenoloxidase, and other members of this arthropod gene familyare consistent with the possibility that a common ancestralmolecule had both phenoloxidase and oxygen-binding capabilities.  相似文献   

2.
Ontogeny of Crustacean Respiratory Proteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
  相似文献   

3.
Molecular evolution of the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Arthropod hemocyanins are members of a protein superfamily that also comprises the arthropod phenoloxidases (tyrosinases), crustacean pseudohemocyanins (cryptocyanins), and insect storage hexamerins. The evolution of these proteins was inferred by neighbor-joining, maximum-parsimony, and maximum-likelihood methods. Monte Carlo shuffling approaches provided evidence against a discernible relationship of the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily and molluscan hemocyanins or nonarthropodan tyrosinases. Within the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily, the phenoloxidase probably emerged early in the (eu-)arthropod stemline and thus form the most likely outgroup. The respiratory hemocyanins evolved from these enzymes before the radiation of the extant euarthropodan subphyla. Due to different functional constraints, replacement rates greatly vary between the clades. Divergence times were thus estimated assuming local molecular clocks using several substitution models. The results were consistent and indicated the separation of the cheliceratan and crustacean hemocyanins close to 600 MYA. The different subunit types of the multihexameric cheliceratan hemocyanin have a rather conservative structure and diversified in the arachnidan stemline between 550 and 450 MYA. By contrast, the separation of the crustacean (malacostracan) hemocyanin subunits probably occurred only about 200 MYA. The nonrespiratory pseudohemocyanins evolved within the Decapoda about 215 MYA. The insect hemocyanins and storage hexamerins emerged independently from the crustacean hemocyanins. The time of divergence of the insect proteins from the malacostracan hemocyanins was estimated to be about 430-440 MYA, providing support for the notion that the Hexapoda evolved from the same crustacean lineage as the Malacostraca.  相似文献   

4.
P D Jeffrey 《Biochemistry》1979,18(12):2508-2513
Examination and measurement of electron micrographs of negatively stained hemocyanin molecules from Cherax destructor show that the predominant aggregated forms, the 16S and 24S components, are typical structures for arthropod hexamers and dodecamers, respectively. In Cherax hemocyanin the hexamers are formed from the monomeric (Mr congruent to 75,000) subunits, M1 and M2, while the dodecamers contain in addition a dimeric (Mr congruent to 150,000) subunit, M3'. Studies of the composition of solutions of the subunits M1 and m2 to which calcium ions have been added at pH 7.8 show that, under these conditions, reassembly occurs to particles indistinguishable from native hexamers. It is noteworthy that dodecamers are not seen since this confirms the previous suggestion that incorporation of the dimeric subunit in the assembly process is necessary for their formation. The results obtained from Cherax hemocyanin are related to those of previous structural studies of arthropod hemocyanins. In particular, the possible controlling role of certain specific subunits in arthropod hemocyanin oligomers containing more than one kind of subunit is illustrated with a model for the Cherax dodecamer, in which the dimeric subunit is shared between the two halves of the molecule.  相似文献   

5.
Arthropod phenoloxidases catalyze the melanization and sclerotization of the new postmolt exoskeleton, and they function in the immune response. Hemocyanin, phylogenetically related to phenoloxidase, can function as a phenoloxidase under certain conditions. We investigated the relative contributions of hemocyte phenoloxidase and hemocyanin in the brachyuran crab Cancer magister, using the physiological ratio at which they occur in the hemolymph, and found that hemocyte phenoloxidase has higher activity. They both convert diphenols to o-quinones, but only the hemocyte phenoloxidase is able to catalyze the conversion of monophenols to diphenols. The quaternary structure of hemocyanin affects its reactivity as phenoloxidase. We suggest that prophenoloxidase is released from hemocytes and moves across epidermis into new exoskeleton during premolt and is activated in early postmolt. In addition to functional studies, we have determined the complete cDNA sequence of C. magister hemocyte prophenoloxidase and partial sequences from the branchiopods Artemia franciscana and Triops longicaudatus. We also sequenced C. magister cryptocyanin 2 and a hemocyanin from the amphipod Cyamus scammoni and used these and other members of the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily for phylogenetic analyses. The phylogenies presented here are consistent with the possibility that a common ancestral molecule had both phenoloxidase and reversible oxygen-binding capabilities.  相似文献   

6.
N-terminal amino acid sequences for the two hemocyanin subunits from the deep-sea crustacean Bathynomus giganteus have been determined by Edman degradation, providing the first sequence information for a hemocyanin from an isopod. In addition, purified hemocyanin from B. giganteus exhibited phenoloxidase activity in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Although a natural activator has not yet been identified, a preliminary study of the enzyme indicated a K(m) of 5mM for dopamine and an initial rate of 0.1 micromol per min per mg protein, values consistent with a significant role for this enzyme in the innate immune system of B. giganteus. Moreover, after separation of hemolymph by alkaline polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the only detectable phenoloxidase activity coincided with the two hemocyanin subunits. The hemocyanin of this primitive crustacean may fulfill dual functions, both as oxygen carrier and as the phenoloxidase crucial for host defense.  相似文献   

7.
Copper-containing hemocyanins serve to transport oxygen in many arthropod species. Here I describe the identification and cDNA cloning of a structurally closely related non-respiratory pseudo-hemocyanin (PHc) of the American lobster, Homarus americanus. This protein has lost the ability to bind copper and, therefore, oxygen because a histidine residue in copper-binding site A is replaced by tyrosine. Like many arthropod hemocyanins, PHc forms a hexamer. It consists of two different subunit types of 660 and 661 amino acids, respectively, that share a 94.4% sequence identity. Whereas Homarus hemocyanin is produced in the hepatopancreas, PHc is synthesized by the ovaries and the heart tissue. Because different levels of PHc were observed in distinct individuals, I propose an association of the synthesis of this protein with the molting or reproduction cycle, similar to the hexamerins, insect storage proteins that are also related to the hemocyanins. However, phylogenetic analyses show that PHc derived independently from crustacean hemocyanins. Therefore, Homarus PHc is a member of a new class within the growing hemocyanin protein superfamily.  相似文献   

8.
Evolution of arthropod hemocyanins and insect storage proteins (hexamerins)   总被引:6,自引:2,他引:4  
Crustacean and cheliceratan hemocyanins (oxygen-transport proteins) and insect hexamerins (storage proteins) are homologous gene products, although the latter do not bind oxygen and do not possess the copper- binding histidines present in the hemocyanins. An alignment of 19 amino acid sequences of hemocyanin subunits and insect hexamerins was made, based on the conservation of elements of secondary structure observed in X-ray structures of two hemocyanin subunits. The alignment was analyzed using parsimony and neighbor-joining methods. Results provide strong indications for grouping together the sequences of the 2 crustacean hemocyanin subunits, the 5 cheliceratan hemocyanin subunits, and the 12 insect hexamerins. Within the insect clade, four methionine- rich proteins, four arylphorins, and two juvenile hormone-suppressible proteins from Lepidoptera, as well as two dipteran proteins, form four separate groups. In the absence of an outgroup sequence, it is not possible to present information about the ancestral state from which these proteins are derived. Although this family of proteins clearly consists of homologous gene products, there remain striking differences in gene organization and site of biosynthesis of the proteins within the cell. Because studies on 18S and 12S rRNA sequences indicate a rather close relationship between insects and crustaceans, we propose that hemocyanin is the ancestral arthropod protein and that insect hexamerins lost their copper-binding capability after divergence of the insects from the crustaceans.   相似文献   

9.
The transport of oxygen in the hemolymph of many arthropod and mollusc species is mediated by large copper-proteins that are referred to as hemocyanins. Arthropod hemocyanins are composed of hexamers and oligomers of hexamers. Arachnid hemocyanins usually form 4 x 6-mers consisting of seven distinct subunit types (termed a-g), although in some spider taxa deviations from this standard scheme have been observed. Applying immunological and electrophoretic methods, six distinct hemocyanin subunits were identified in the red-legged golden orb-web spider Nephila inaurata madagascariensis (Araneae: Tetragnathidae). The complete cDNA sequences of six subunits were obtained that corresponded to a-, b-, d-, e-, f- and g-type subunits. No evidence for a c-type subunit was found in this species. The inclusion of the N. inaurata hemocyanins in a multiple alignment of the arthropod hemocyanins and the application of the Bayesian method of phylogenetic inference allow, for the first time, a solid reconstruction of the intramolecular evolution of the chelicerate hemocyanin subunits. The branch leading to subunit a diverged first, followed by the common branch of the dimer-forming b and c subunits, while subunits d and f, as well as subunits e and g form common branches. Assuming a clock-like evolution of the chelicerate hemocyanins, a timescale for the evolution of the Chelicerata was obtained that agrees with the fossil record.  相似文献   

10.
Hemolymph Proteins and Molting in Crustaceans and Insects   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
The exoskeleton of crustaceans and insects is formed by cellsof the hypodermis, but several hemolymph proteins contributeto the synthesis of the new exoskeleton. These hemolymph proteinsshare a surprising degree of sequence similarity and are membersof the hemocyanin gene family. Copper-containing prophenoloxidasesof crustaceans and insects are directly involved in cross-linkingand hardening of the exoskeleton during molting and repair.Crustacean cryptocyanin and insect hexamerins lack copper andhave probably evolved from a copper-free product of an earlyhemocyanin gene duplication. These proteins have been implicatedin transport of hormones and phenols, and may be used directlyas structural components of the new exoskeleton. They are synthesizedelsewhere in the body, transported in the hemolymph, and probablytaken up by the hypodermis via specific receptors. Hemocyaninshave some residual phenoloxidase activity, in addition to theirprimary role of supplying oxygen to the metabolizing tissues.Thus multiple members of the hemocyanin gene family play vitalroles during molting, and a molecular phytogeny of these proteinswill contribute to our understanding of the evolution of formand function of these molecules from oxygen transport to molt-relatedactivities. Further studies on the expression of prophenoloxidase,cryptocyanin, hexamerins and hemocyanin, potential marker proteins,may extend our understanding of the relationship between othermolting animals in the proposed clade, Ecdysozoa.  相似文献   

11.
Phenoloxidase, widely distributed among animals, plants, and fungi, is involved in many biologically essential functions including sclerotization and host defense. In chelicerates, the oxygen carrier hemocyanin seems to function as the phenoloxidase. Here, we show that hemocyanins from two ancient chelicerates, the horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus and the tarantula Eurypelma californicum, exhibit O-diphenoloxidase activity induced by submicellar concentrations of SDS, a reagent frequently used to identify phenoloxidase activity. The enzymatic activity seems to be restricted to only a few of the heterogeneous subunits. These active subunit types share similar topological positions in the quaternary structures as linkers of the two tightly connected 2 x 6-mers. Because no other phenoloxidase activity was found in the hemolymph of these animals, their hemocyanins may act as a phenoloxidase and thus be involved in the primary immune response and sclerotization of the cuticle. In contrast, hemolymph of a more recent arthropod, the crab Cancer magister, contains both hemocyanin with weak phenoloxidase activity and another hemolymph protein with relatively strong phenoloxidase activity. The chelicerate hemocyanin subunits showing phenoloxidase activity may have evolved into a separate phenoloxidase in crustaceans.  相似文献   

12.
Origin and evolution of arthropod hemocyanins and related proteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Arthropod hemocyanins are large, multimeric, (n x 6) copper-containing proteins that deliver oxygen in the haemolymph of many chelicerate, crustacean, myriapod, and also possibly some insect species. The arthropod hemocyanins belong to a large protein superfamily that also includes the arthropod phenoloxidases, certain crustacean and insect storage proteins (pseudo-hemocyanins and hexamerins), and the insect hexamerin receptors. Here I summarise the present knowledge of the origin, functional adaptations, and evolution of these proteins. Arthropod and mollusc hemocyanins are, if at all, only distantly related. As early as in the arthropod stem line, the hemocyanins emerged from a phenoloxidase-like enzyme. The evolution of distinct hemocyanin subunits, as well as the formation of multi-hexamers occurred independently within the arthropod subphyla. Hemocyanin subunit evolution is strikingly different in the Chelicerata, Myriapoda and Crustacea. Hemocyanins individually gave rise to two distinct copper-less storage proteins, the insect hexamerins and the crustacean pseudo-hemocyanins (cryptocyanins). The receptor responsible for the uptake of hexamerin by the larval fat body of the insects emerged from a hexamerin-precursor. Molecular phylogenetic analyses show a close relationship of the crustacean and insect proteins, providing strong support for a pancrustacean taxon, while structural data suggest a myriapod-chelicerate clade.  相似文献   

13.
Hemocyanins are large copper-containing respiratory proteins found in many arthropod species. Scorpions and orthognath spiders possess a highly conserved 4 x 6-mer hemocyanin that consists of at least seven distinct subunit types (termed a to g). However, many "modern" entelegyne spiders such as Cupiennius salei differ from the standard arachnid scheme and have 2 x 6-mer hemocyanins. Here we report the complete primary structure of the 2 x 6-mer hemocyanin of C. salei as deduced from cDNA sequencing, gel electrophoresis, and matrix-assisted laser desorption spectroscopy. Six distinct subunit types (1 through 6) and three additional allelic sequences were identified. Each 1 x 6-mer half-molecule most likely is composed of subunits 1-6, with subunit 1 linking the two hexamers via a disulfide bridge located in a C-terminal extension. The C. salei hemocyanin subunits all belong to the arachnid g-type, whereas the other six types (a-f) have been lost in evolution. The reconstruction of a complex hemocyanin from a single g-type subunit, which commenced about 190 million years ago and was completed about 90 million years ago, might be explained by physiological and behavioral changes that occurred during the evolution of the entelegyne spiders.  相似文献   

14.
This review summarizes recent highlights of our joint work on the structure, evolution, and function of a family of highly complex proteins, the hemocyanins. They are blue-pigmented oxygen carriers, occurring freely dissolved in the hemolymph of many arthropods and molluscs. They are copper type-3 proteins and bind one dioxygen molecule between two copper atoms in a side-on coordination. They possess between 6 and 160 oxygen-binding sites, and some of them display the highest molecular cooperativity observed in nature. The functional properties of hemocyanins can be convincingly described by either the Monod-Wyman-Changeux (MWC) model or its hierarchical extension, the Nested MWC model; the latter takes into account the structural hierarchies in the oligomeric architecture. Recently, we applied these models to interpret the influence of allosteric effectors in detailed terms. Effectors shift the allosteric equilibria but have no influence on the oxygen affinities characterizing the various conformational states. We have shown that hemocyanins from species living at different environmental temperatures have a cooperativity optimum at the typical temperature of their natural habitat. Besides being oxygen carriers, some hemocyanins function as a phenoloxidase (tyrosinase/catecholoxidase) which, however, requires activation. Chelicerates such as spiders and scorpions lack a specific phenoloxidase, and in these animals activated hemocyanin might catalyse melanin synthesis in vivo. We propose a similar activation mechanism for arthropod hemocyanins, molluscan hemocyanins and tyrosinases: amino acid(s) that sterically block the access of phenolic compounds to the active site have to be removed. The catalysis mechanism itself can now be explained on the basis of the recently published crystal structure of a tyrosinase. In a series of recent publications, we presented the complete gene and primary structure of various hemocyanins from different molluscan classes. From these data, we deduced that the molluscan hemocyanin molecule evolved ca. 740 million years ago, prior to the separation of the extant molluscan classes. Our recent advances in the 3D cryo-electron microscopy of hemocyanins also allow considerable insight into the oligomeric architecture of these proteins of high molecular mass. In the case of molluscan hemocyanin, the structure of the wall and collar of the basic decamers is now rapidly becoming known in greater detail. In the case of arthropod hemocyanin, a 10-? structure and molecular model of the Limulus 8 × 6mer shows the amino acids at the various interfaces between the eight hexamers, and reveals histidine-rich residue clusters that might be involved in transferring the conformational signals establishing cooperative oxygen binding.  相似文献   

15.
Hemocyanins are oligomeric metalloproteins containing binuclear copper centers that reversibly combine with oxygen molecules. The structural stability and functional properties of these proteins are modified by divalent cations. Equilibrium dialysis was used to study the reversible interaction of Callinectes sapidus and Limulus polyphemus hemocyanins with the divalent cations calcium, cadmium, zinc, copper, and mercury. The number of binding sites and association constants for each cation were obtained from an analysis of the binding data by a nonlinear least-squares minimization procedure. Spectral analysis showed Limulus hemocyanin to possess two mercury-reactive sulfhydryl groups per subunit (Kassoc = 2.02 X 10(45) M-1). Callinectes hemocyanin contains only one such group (Kassoc = 2.29 X 10(34) M-1). Cadmium and zinc are shown to substitute for calcium ions. Oxygen binding studies with Limulus hemocyanin showed that all five divalent metal ions increase its oxygen affinity. Calcium ions increase cooperativity of oxygen binding, while heavy-metal ions have an opposite effect. Binding of two mercuric ions per Limulus hemocyanin subunit irreversibly fixes the 48 subunit aggregate in a high-affinity noncooperative conformational state. These results offer a striking contrast to the functional consequences of heavy-metal ion interactions with Callinectes hemocyanin [Brouwer, M., Bonaventura, C., & Bonaventura, J. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 2529-2538]. The functional alterations associated with metal ion interactions are discussed within the context of an extension of the two-state model for allosteric transitions of Monod et al. [Monod, J., Wyman, J., & Changeux, J.P. (1965) J. Mol. Biol. 12, 88-118]. Incubation of Limulus oxy- or deoxyhemocyanin with mercuric chloride results in the conversion of 60% of the binuclear copper sites to stable half-apo sites. The remaining active sites are stable with respect to mercury-induced copper displacement when oxygen is bridging both coppers. In the absence of oxygen these sites will eventually lose both copper atoms. Under the same conditions 50% of the binuclear copper sites of Callinectes deoxyhemocyanin are converted to half-apo sites. In this case oxygen completely protects against copper displacement [Brouwer, M., Bonaventura, C., & Bonaventura, J. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 2529-2538]. The binuclear copper center of Busycon carica is not affected at all, demonstrating profound differences between the active sites of hemocyanins of a chelicerate arthropod (Limulus), a crustacean arthropod (Callinectes), and a gastropod mollusc (Busycon).  相似文献   

16.
节肢动物血蓝蛋白家族的组成与演化   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
谢维  栾云霞 《生命科学》2011,(1):106-114
血蓝蛋白是动物界的三类呼吸功能蛋白之一,目前仅发现于节肢动物和软体动物等少数动物类群中。不同亚型的血蓝蛋白有不同的理化性质和序列,但均结合氧分子,并以六聚体,甚至更复杂的聚合体结构存在。血蓝蛋白与酚氧化酶、拟血蓝蛋白、昆虫储存蛋白以及昆虫储存蛋白受体等结构类似、进化上近缘的分子共同组成了血蓝蛋白超家族。该文主要介绍了血蓝蛋白家族成员在节肢动物四大类群(螯肢动物、多足动物、甲壳动物和六足动物)中已知的分布、结构和功能,并重点综述了血蓝蛋白家族成员在节肢动物系统演化研究中发挥的独特而有效的作用,进一步强调了在更多节肢动物类群中研究血蓝蛋白家族的功能和演化的重要性。  相似文献   

17.
Summary Structural and functional studies of the hemocyanin of the semi-terrestrial ghost crab,Ocypode quadrata, demonstrate a variety of differences in comparison to the hemocyanin of aquatic crabs. These differences may be related to the terrestrial habit of this crab. Unlike aquatic crabs, the major (56%) blood component is the hexamer; the remaining 44% is dodecamer. The hexamers and dodecamers are not in rapid equilibrium. Electrophoretic analysis of the subunit composition indicates three major components referred to as 1, 3, and 4, and one minor component referred to as component 2. These components, although electrophoretically distinct, are alike immunologically. Components 1 and 2 are essentially absent from purified hexamers, whereas they compose 1/3 of the subunits in dodecamers. These results suggest that they are involved in linking hexamers to form dodecamers, and that two, rather than one, subunits are involved in the bridge. Oxygen-binding measurements show a higher degree of cooperativity, and a much reduced allosteric effect ofl-lactate on the dialyzed hemocyanin as compared to the hemocyanin of aquatic crabs. Exercise rapidly, induces a large drop in hemolymph pH (0.5 units) and a corresponding increase in lactate concentrations (to 10 mM).  相似文献   

18.
Hemocyanins are multimeric copper-containing hemolymph proteins involved in oxygen binding and transport in all major arthropod lineages. Most arachnids have seven primary subunits (encoded by paralogous genes ag), which combine to form a 24-mer (4 × 6) quaternary structure. Within some spider lineages, however, hemocyanin evolution has been a dynamic process with extensive paralog duplication and loss. We have obtained hemocyanin gene sequences from numerous representatives of the spider infraorders Mygalomorphae and Araneomorphae in order to infer the evolution of the hemocyanin gene family and estimate spider relationships using these conserved loci. Our hemocyanin gene tree is largely consistent with the previous hypotheses of paralog relationships based on immunological studies, but reveals some discrepancies in which paralog types have been lost or duplicated in specific spider lineages. Analyses of concatenated hemocyanin sequences resolved deep nodes in the spider phylogeny and recovered a number of clades that are supported by other molecular studies, particularly for mygalomorph taxa. The concatenated data set is also used to estimate dates of higher-level spider divergences and suggests that the diversification of extant mygalomorphs preceded that of extant araneomorphs. Spiders are diverse in behavior and respiratory morphology, and our results are beneficial for comparative analyses of spider respiration. Lastly, the conserved hemocyanin sequences allow for the inference of spider relationships and ancient divergence dates.  相似文献   

19.
Hemocyanin is a copper-containing respiratory protein that is widespread within the arthropod phylum. Among the Crustacea, hemocyanins are apparently restricted to the Malacostraca. While well-studied in Decapoda, no hemocyanin sequence has been known from the ’lower’ Malacostraca. The hemocyanin of the amphipod Gammarus roeseli is a hexamer that consists of at least five distinct subunits. The complete cDNA sequence of one subunit and a tentative partial sequence of another subunit have been determined. The complete G. roeseli hemocyanin subunit comprises 2,150 bp, which translates in a protein of 672 amino acids with a molecular mass of 76.3 kDa. Phylogenetic analyses show that, in contrast to previous assumptions, the amphipod hemocyanins do not belong to the α-type of crustacean hemocyanin subunits. Rather, amphipod hemocyanins split from the clade leading to α and γ-subunits most likely at the time of separation of peracarid and eucarid Crustacea about 300 million years ago. Molecular clock analyses further suggest that the divergence of β-type subunits and other crustacean hemocyanins occurred around 315 million years ago (MYA) in the malacostracan stemline, while α- and γ-type subunits separated 258 MYA, and pseudohemocyanins and γ-subunits 210 million years ago.  相似文献   

20.
Hemocyanin is the blue respiratory protein of many arthropod species. While its structure, evolution, and physiological function have been studied in detail in Decapoda, there is little information on hemocyanins from other crustacean taxa. Here, we have investigated the hemocyanin of the peacock mantis shrimp Odontodactylus scyllarus, which belongs to the Stomatopoda (Hoplocarida). O. scyllarus hemocyanin forms a dodecamer (2 × 6-mer), which is composed of at least four distinct subunit types. We obtained the full-length cDNA sequences of three hemocyanin subunits, while a fourth cDNA was incomplete at its 5′ end. The complete full-length cDNAs of O. scyllarus hemocyanin translate into polypeptides of 650–662 amino acids, which include signal peptides of 16 or 17 amino acids. The predicted molecular masses of 73.1–75.1 kDa correspond well with the main hemolymph proteins detected by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting using various anti-hemocyanin antibodies. Phylogenetic analyses show that O. scyllarus hemocyanins belong to the β-type of malacostracan hemocyanin subunits, which diverged from the other subunits before the radiation of the malacostracan subclasses around 520 million years ago. Molecular clock analysis revealed an ancient and complex pattern of hemocyanin subunit evolution in Malacostraca and also allowed dating divergence times of malacostracan taxa.  相似文献   

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