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Protein hydrolysis by Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata, digestive proteases: The catalytic role of cathepsin D

✍ Scribed by France Brunelle; Binh Nguyen-Quoc; Conrad Cloutier; Dominique Michaud


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
221 KB
Volume
42
Category
Article
ISSN
0739-4462

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✦ Synopsis


Although several studies were carried out over the last 15 years to assess the nature and characteristics of digestive proteases in herbivorous insects, little is known about the relative importance of these enzymes in the hydrolysis of specific dietary proteins. In this study, we assessed the involvement of Colorado potato beetle (CPB; Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say, Chrysomelidae) aspartate, cysteine, and serine digestive proteinases in the degradation of two model substrates: ribulose biphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, the major protein in potato leaves, and the pro-region of papaya proteinase IV, a cysteine protease inhibitor (PI) susceptible to proteolysis by the insect nontarget proteases. As shown by the use of various combinations of diagnostic PIs specific to the different classes of CPB proteinases, the insect aspartate (cathepsin D-like) proteinase activity is important in initiating the hydrolysis of both proteins when the insect is feeding on potato, while cysteine (cathepsin B/ cathepsin H-like) and serine (chymotrypsin-like) proteinase activities would be involved in subsequent steps of the hydrolytic process. Similar observations were made with diet-induced variants of the insect protease system, suggesting the importance of digestive cathepsin D and the sequential hydrolysis of dietary proteins in CPB, regardless of the diet ingested. Based on these observations, a preliminary model is proposed to explain dietary protein hydrolysis in CPB, also taking into account the information currently available about the distribution of digestive endo-and exopeptidases in the midgut of CPB. The potential of a wound-induced cathepsin D inhibitor from tomato in developing CPB-resistant transgenic potato lines is also discussed, after demonstrating the pepstatin-like effect of a recombinant form of this proteinaceous inhibitor against the insect cathepsin D. Arch. Insect Biochem. Physiol. 42:8898, 1999.