Vitellogenin‐like proteins are members of the large lipid transfer proteins, a family of proteins involved in reproduction, lipid circulation and immune defences. In this study, we identified a new Bactericera… Click to show full abstract
Vitellogenin‐like proteins are members of the large lipid transfer proteins, a family of proteins involved in reproduction, lipid circulation and immune defences. In this study, we identified a new Bactericera cockerelli vitellogenin‐like (Vg‐like) transcript, and named it BcVg6‐like based on its similarity to Acyrthosiphon pisum Vg6. In silico analyses predicted different conserved domains in BcVg6‐like compared with the conventional Ba. cockerelli vitellogenin, BcVg1‐like, previously described by our research group. Phylogenetic analyses determined that BcVg6‐like clustered with Vg‐like‐B proteins and not the conventional vitellogenins involved in vitellogenesis. Also, the expression analyses showed differences in BcVg6‐like transcript expression between 7‐day‐old males and 3‐ and 7‐day‐old females. BcVg6‐like was not upregulated after exogenous application of juvenile hormone III, but its relative expression increased significantly in alimentary canals of adult females exposed to tomato plants infected by the bacterial plant pathogen ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’. Our results suggest that in Ba. cockerelli, both vitellogenin genes may have different functions: BcVg1‐like is a conventional vitellogenin that conserved its ancestral function as an egg yolk precursor whereas BcVg6‐like might have acquired a function in lipid and/or other molecule transport, and could potentially play a role in immune defence.
               
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