A new type of highly polymerized yolk protein from the cochineal insect Dactylopius confusus

1996 
: A female specific protein was isolated from eggs and female hemolymph of cochineal insects, using density gradient ultracentrifugation, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and size exclusion column chromatography. The protein was found to consist of four different subunits with apparent molecular weights (Mr) 45,000, 49,000, 53,000, and 56,000, respectively. All four subunits were found to be glycosylated; no association of lipids was detected. Size exclusion column chromatography and non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated that the native yolk protein exists as large polymers. Electron microscopy showed that these molecules are long, helical ribbons of variable size which are found in both hemolymph and eggs. Using cryo-electron microscopy, it was shown that the ribbons were 14.6 +/- 1.5 nm wide; the helix they form has a repeat distance of 104.9 +/- 11.3 nm and a diameter of 42.1 +/- 5 nm. A clear substructure of the ribbons was recognized. The newly identified protein is the major yolk protein of Dactylopius confusus and no other proteins resembling the more familiar vitellins of other insect species were detected. Moreover, the D. confusus yolk protein appears to be unique both in its subunit structure and in its polymerizing qualities. Thus, the cochineal yolk protein (CYP) is suggested to represent a new type of insect yolk protein.
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