Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1938949 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2006 | 4 Pages |
The hornet possesses highly toxic venom, which is rich in toxin, enzymes, and biologically active peptides. Several bradykinin-like peptides, vespakinins, have been found in wasp venoms since 1970s, but the mode of biosynthesis of these peptides is unknown. In the present study, a vespakinin M was purified from venom of Vespa magnifica. Its primary sequence was established as GRPPGFSPFRID. The cDNA encoding the vespakinin M was cloned from the cDNA library of V. magnifica venom gland. The cDNA structure of vespakinin M was found to contain a coding region of 168 nucleotides. The encoded precursor of vespakinin M is composed of a signal peptide, an acidic peptide, and a mature peptide of vespakinin M. This is the first kininogen from insects; it is also the first kininogen from invertebrates. The cDNA structure encoding vespakinin M suggests that the generation mode of bradykinin-related peptides in wasp is different from amphibian skin and mammalian blood system.