Publications by authors named "L Noyce"

Cloned EcR and USP cDNAs encoding the ecdysone receptors of four insect pests (Lucilia cuprina, Myzus persicae, Bemisia tabaci, Helicoverpa armigera) were manipulated to allow the co-expression of their ligand binding domains (LBDs) in insect cells using a baculovirus vector. Recombinant DE/F segment pairs (and additionally, for H. armigera, an E/F segment pair) from the EcR and USP proteins associated spontaneously with high affinity to form heterodimers that avidly bound an ecdysteroid ligand.

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Article Synopsis
  • The ecdysone receptor is a key transcription factor involved in gene regulation during development and reproduction in arthropods, formed by the EcR and ultraspiracle protein.
  • Bisacylhydrazine insecticides target this receptor selectively, being effective against Lepidoptera but not Hemiptera or other insect orders.
  • A study revealed structural differences in the ecdysone receptor's ligand-binding pocket between the sweet potato whitefly and a lepidopteran species, suggesting these variations may underlie the selectivity of these insecticides.
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The genome of the Australian marsupial Macropus robustus contains a highly conserved processed hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase homologue, HPRT-2. Using the techniques of reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and protein isoelectric focusing (IEF) we have shown this processed gene to be fully functional, but liver specific. In contrast, the unprocessed X-linked parent gene HPRT-1 was expressed in all somatic tissues.

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A highly conserved hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase processed pseudogene (KPH) has been isolated from a female kangaroo (Macropus robustus) lambda EMBL3 genomic library. The pseudogene contains only transcribed material with all of the introns precisely removed and has possible direct repeats at either end of the message. It has a 654-nucleotide open reading frame (ORF) from the Met start codon to the stop codon that contains no additions, deletions or premature stops relative to expressed HPRT genes and, therefore, the possibility exists that it is expressed in vivo.

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An X-linked clone encoding exons 4-9 of the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) gene was isolated from a kangaroo (Macropus robustus: Marsupialia) lambda EMBL4 genomic library. Sequence similarity between the kangaroo and eutherian HPRT coding sequences was high; however, intron sizes varied significantly between the kangaroo and other eutherian species. HpaII and HhaI sites in the body of the gene were generally hypermethylated in vivo on the active, relative to the inactive X, with sites within intron 3 showing essentially complete correspondence of activity with methylation and inactivity with unmethylation.

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