Publication | Open Access
Deletion of a gene encoding an amino acid transporter in the midgut membrane causes resistance to a <i>Bombyx</i> parvo-like virus
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Citations
16
References
2008
Year
GeneticsMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsVirus StructureVirus GeneViral GeneticsAmino Acid TransporterType 2VirologyBiologyMolecular VirologyDefective Membrane ProteinNatural SciencesPathogenesisMicrobiologyVirus-host InteractionMidgut MembraneHost ResistanceMedicine
Bombyx mori densovirus type 2 (BmDNV-2), a parvo-like virus, replicates only in midgut columnar cells and causes fatal disease. The resistance expressed in some silkworm strains against the virus is determined by a single gene, nsd-2, which is characterized as nonsusceptibility irrespective of the viral dose. However, the responsible gene has been unknown. We isolated the nsd-2 gene by positional cloning. The virus resistance is caused by a 6-kb deletion in the ORF of a gene encoding a 12-pass transmembrane protein, a member of an amino acid transporter family, and expressed only in midgut. Germ-line transformation with a wild-type transgene expressed in the midgut restores susceptibility, showing that the defective membrane protein is responsible for resistance. Cumulatively, our data show that the membrane protein is a functional receptor for BmDNV-2. This is a previously undescribed report of positional cloning of a mutant gene in Bombyx and isolation of an absolute virus resistance gene in insects.
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