Method of identifying an agent that modulates the activity of a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6780601
  • Patent Number
    6,780,601
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, October 3, 2001
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 24, 2004
    19 years ago
Abstract
The present invention is directed to a nucleic acid encoding a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. Vectors and host cells comprising the nucleic acid are also provided. A method of identifying agents that modulate the activity of a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel is also provided. Such agents are useful as insecticides.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Glutamate-gated chloride channels are a family of ligand-gated chloride channels unique to invertebrates. Glutamate-gated chloride channels have been cloned from


Caenorhabditis elegans


(Cully et al. (1994) Nature 20:371; U.S. Pat. No. 5,527,703),


Drosophila melanogaster


(Cully et al. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271:20187 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,693,492),


Haemonchus contortus


(Delany et al. (1998) Mol. Biochem. Parasit. 97:177),


Lucilia cuprina


(GenBank Accession No. AAC31949) and


Schistocerca americana


(Cohen et al. (1999) 29th Annual Neuroscience Meeting, p. 199). The clones isolated from


C. elegans, D. melanogaster


and


S. americana


have been functionally expressed in Xenopus oocytes, and shown to be activated by glutamate and avermectin. (Arena et al. (1991) Molecular Pharm. 40:368; Arena et al. (1992) Molecular Brain Research 15:339; U.S. Pat. No. 5,693,492; U.S. Pat. No. 5,527,703; Cohen et al., supra).




Because glutamate-gated chloride channels are specific to invertebrates, the channels provide a target for insecticides. In particular, the glutamate-gated chloride channels are the target of the avermectin class of insecticides. Avermectins are naturally occurring and synthetic macrocylic lactones that are widely used in the treatment of parasites and insects.




Insects of the order lepidoptera are significant pests, and in particular the larvae are destructive defoliaters. Further, lepidopteran pests are typically harder to control than diptera. Accordingly, there is a need to identify and develop safe and specific insecticides against lepidopteran pests. The present invention addresses this need by providing isolated nucleic acids encoding a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel, recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channels, and a method of identifying agents that modulate the activity of the channel.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention is directed to an isolated nucleic acid encoding a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. In a preferred embodiment the nucleic acid is isolatable from


Heliothis virescens


. In another preferred embodiment the nucleic acid comprises a sequence encoding the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO. 14.




The present invention further comprises vectors comprising a nucleic acid encoding a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel, and host cells comprising the vectors.




Another aspect of the present invention provides a recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel, and kits and compositions comprising a recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. A method for preparing a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel is also provided.




In yet another embodiment, the present invention provides a Xenopus oocyte comprising a nucleic acid encoding a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel, and a Xenopus occyte expressing a functional lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel.




The present invention further provides a method of identifying agents that modulate the activity of the lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel, and agents identified by the method.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

presents electrophysiological recordings demonstrating the effect of glutamate on a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel expressed in oocytes.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




The present invention is directed to isolated nucleic acids encoding lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channels. An isolated nucleic acid encoding a lepidopteran glutamate gated chloride channel is defined herein as a nucleic acid isolatable from an insect of the order lepidoptera and capable of encoding a functional glutamate-gated chloride channel. In a preferred embodiment, the nucleic acid is isolatable from Heliothis. In a more preferred embodiment, the nucleic acid is isolatable from


Heliothis virescens


. A functional glutamate-gated chloride channel is defined herein as a protein having the ability to bind glutamate and thereby mediate chloride flux in a cell expressing the channel.




The isolated nucleic acid may be DNA or RNA, including cDNA and mRNA. In a preferred embodiment, the isolated nucleic acid has a sequence encoding the amino acid sequence at of SEQ ID NO. 14. The ordinarily skilled artisan, with knowledge of the genetic code, can determine DNA and RNA sequences that encode the amino acid sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO. 14. Further, the sequence may be selected to optimize expression in a particular host organism by utilizing known preferred codons for the host organism of choice.




In another preferred embodiment, the isolated nucleic acid comprises the sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO. 13. In another preferred embodiment, the isolated nucleic acid comprises the sequence of nucleotides 144 through 1484 of SEQ ID No. 13. Fragments of a nucleic acid having the sequence of SEQ ID No. 13 that maintain the ability to encode a functional lepidopiteran glutamate-gated chloride channel are also encompassed by the present invention.




The present invention further encompasses nucleic acids isolatable from lepidoptera and capable of hybridizing under high stringency conditions to the complement of a nucleic acid having the sequence of nucleotides 144 through 1484 of SEQ ID NO: 13. Nucleic acid hybridization conditions are known to those of ordinary skill in the art and disclosed for example by Sambrook et al. (1989) Molecular Cloning—A laboratory manual, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. High stringency conditions are defined herein as 0.1×standard saline citrate (SSC), 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) at 60° C.




In another embodiment, the present invention provides isolated nucleic acids having at least about 80%, and preferably at least about 90%, and more preferably at least about 95% sequence identify to the nucleic acid having the sequence of nucleotides 144 through 1484 of SEQ ID NO: 13. Sequence identity is determined using the program Clustal W described by Higgins et al. (1994) Nucleic Acids Res. 22:4673 and may be calculated using the EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Database (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/embl.html). The ability of the isolated nucleic acid of the present invention to encode a functional glutamate-gated chloride channel can be determined by functional assays as described hereinbelow.




A protein having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 14 has glutamate-gated chloride channel activity. Analysis of the amino acid sequence and alignment with the sequence of the Drosophila glutamate-gated chloride channel indicates that the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 14 contains four membrane spanning regions at amino acids 246-268, 274-293, 309-328 and 415-435. The amino terminal 20-30 amino acids encode a signal peptide. Amino acid changes may be tolerated in the signal peptide domain so long as the ability of the protein to insert into a selected cell membrane is maintained. Those of ordinary skill in the art can determine suitable modifications of the sequence of the signal peptide and can likewise determine the nucleic acid sequence encoding the modified signal peptide domain.




The nucleic acids of the present invention may be obtained by using a nucleic acid having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 13 or a fragment thereof to probe a lepidopteran cDNA library. Such libraries may be made by well-known methods, described for example in Sambrook et al., supra, or may be obtained commercially. The identity of the nucleic acid may be confirmed by nucleotide sequencing or by expression and functional analysis as described hereinbelow.




The present invention is further directed to vectors comprising the isolated nucleic acids of the present invention. In the vectors of the present invention, the nucleic acid encoding a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel is operably linked to suitable transcriptional and/or translational regulatory elements to effect expression of the glutamate-gated chloride channel in a suitable host cell. The regulatory elements may be derived from mammalian, microbial, viral or insect genes, and include, for example, promoters, enhancers, transcription and translation initiation sequences, termination sequences, origins of replication, and sequences encoding leader and transport sequences. Suitable regulatory elements are selected for optimal expression in a desired host cell. Useful expression vectors can be constructed by methods known to one of ordinary skill in the art, and vectors into which the nucleic acid of the invention can be inserted are also commercially available. Recombinant viral vectors, including retrovirus, baculovirus, parvovirus and densovirus vectors are particularly preferred.




In a preferred embodiment the vector comprises a strong constitutive or inducible promoter operably linked to a nucleic acid encoding a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. Suitable promoters are well known and readily available to one of ordinary skill in the art, and include for example, the polyhedrin promoter (Kitts et al., 1993, Bio Techniques, 14:810), heat shock promoter (Stellar et al., 1985, EMBO J., 4:167) and metallothionein promoter (Kaufman et al., 1989, Cell 59:359). Expression vectors can be constructed by well known molecular biologial methods as described, for example, in Sambrook et al. (1989) Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., or any of a myriad of laboratory manuals on recombinant DNA technology that are widely available. Expression vectors into which the nucleic acids of the present invention can be cloned under the control of a suitable promoter are also commercially available.




Another embodiment of the present invention provides host cells containing the vectors described above. The host cell may be procaryotic or eukaryotic, including bacterial, yeast, insect or mammalian. Insect and mammalian cells are preferred. Particularly preferred host cells include insect cell lines, including for example


Spodoptera frugiperda


cells. The host cells may be transformed, transfected or infected with the expression vectors of the present invention by methods well-known to one of ordinary skill in the art. Transfection may be accomplished by known methods, such as liposome mediated transfection, calcium phosphate mediated transfection, microinjection and electroporation. Permanently transformed insect cell lines are particularly preferred. For example, insect cell lines such as Drosophilia cell line SH


1


can be transformed with the expression vectors of the present invention by commercially available lipofectin (GIBCO-BRL) to provide permanently transformed cell lines expressing a functional glutamate-gated chloride channel. In a preferred embodiment, the vector is designed such that expression of the protein is inducible.




Expression systems utilizing baculovirus vectors and insect host cells are preferred. The use of baculoviruses as recombinant expression vectors to infect lepidopteran insect cells is known in the art and described for example by Luckow et al. (1988) Bio/Technology 6:47-55 and Miller (1988) Ann Rev Microbiol. 42:177-199. The baculovirus vectors generally contain a strong baculovirus promoter operably linked to a nucleic acid of the present invention such that the promoter directs expression of the lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. Baculovirus polyhedrin promoters such as the Autographa califomica nuclear polyhydrosis virus polyhedrin promoter are preferred.




The baculovirus expression vectors of the present invention are made by inserting the nucleic acid encoding the lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel downstream of the polyhedrin promoter in a baculovirus transfer vector, for example pBacPac8 available from Clontech or Bac-to-Bac available from Life Technologies. Baculovirus transfer vectors further contain flanking baculovirus sequences that allow homologous recombination between the transfer vector and baculovirus DNA during co-transfection. The transfer vector containing the nucleic acid of the invention and viral DNA are used to co-transfect insect cells. In a preferred embodiment the insect cells are Spodoptera.


Spodoptera frugiperda


cells including


Sf


9 are particularly contemplated. During co-transfection, homologous recombination results in the transfer of an expression cassette containing the polyhedrin promoter and the nucleic acid of the present invention to the polyhedrin locus of the viral DNA. The resulting recombinant virus is used to generate viral stocks by standard methods. Insect host cells are infected with the recombinant virus to produce insect cells expressing the glutamate-gated chloride channel.




The present invention is further directed to recombinant glutamate-gated chloride channel. The recombinant lepidopterant glutamate gated chloride channel may be isolated in a membrane preparation or present in the cell membrane of the host cell in which it has been recombinantly produced. Whole cells and membrane preparations comprising the recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel are particularly contemplated. Recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel is useful, for example, to screen potential insecticides by specific binding assays or functional assays.




The present invention further provides a method of making a recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. Recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel is made by transforming, transfecting or infecting a suitable host cell with an expression vector comprising a nucleic acid encoding a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel, culturing the host cell under conditions suitable for expression, and optionally recovering the recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. A suitable host cell is any cell in which the nucleic acid encoding the transporter can be expressed to provide a functional glutamate-gated chloride channel. In a preferred embodiment, the recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel is made in insect cells, preferably


Spodoptera frugiperda


9 (


Sf


9), by infecting the insect cells with a recombinant virus in which the nucleic acid of the invention is under the control of a promoter suitable for use in


Sf


9 cells, such as a polyhedrin or TE


1


promoter, and culturing the cells under conditions suitable for expression of the recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. In another preferred embodiment, the recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel is made in permanently transformed cell lines as described above.




A functional lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel can be identified by one of ordinary skill in the art by functional assays. An exhaustive review of techniques and protocols is provided in Rudy et al., eds. (1992) Methods in Enzymology 207, Academic Press, Inc., San Diego, Calif. For example, two-electrode voltage clamp recordings of host cells or oocytes expressing the lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel can be used to assess chloride flux in response to application of glutamate or ivermnectin phosphate. Dose-dependent glutamate-evoked currents indicate the presence of a functional glutamate-gated chloride channel. Also, the activation of a membrane current by about 100 μm glutamate or 1 μm ivermectin phosphate is indicative of a functional glutamate-gated chloride channel.




The present invention further provides an amphibian oocyte comprising a nucleic acid encoding a functional glutamate-gated chloride channel, and an amphibian oocyte expressing a functional glutamate-gated chloride channel. The oocytes are useful as a system for screening potential insecticides useful against insects of the order lepidoptera. Such oocytes can be made using the nucleic acids of the invention and methods known in the art. In a preferred embodiment, the oocyte is


Xenopus laevis


oocyte. For example, expression vectors containing cDNA encoding the glutamate-gated chloride channel under the control of a strong promoter can be injected into the nuclei of oocytes, after which oocytes are incubated for from one to several days, followed by assessment for the presence of functional glutamate-gated chloride channel. Alternatively, mRNA can be synthesized in vitro from cDNA encoding the glutamate-gated chloride channel, and injected into oocytes, followed by assessment for the presence of functional glutamate-gated chloride channels as described hereinabove.




The present invention further provides methods of identifying agents that modulate the activity of a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel, and also encompasses novel agents identified by such methods. The agent may be an agonist, i.e. it mimics the action of glutamate by activating chloride flux, or an antagonist, i.e. it decreases the glutamate-activated chloride flux. The agent may be nucleic acid, peptide, protein, a non-protein organic molecule, or any other molecule capable of modulating the activity of the glutamate-gated chloride channel.




A method of identifying an agonist comprises applying the putative agonist to a Xenopus oocyte, a cell or membrane expressing the lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride in the presence of chloride ions, and measuring chloride flux, wherein flux of chloride is indicative of an agonist. A method of identifying an antagonist comprises applying glutamate to Xenopus oocyte or a cell or membrane expressing the lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel in the presence of chloride ions and measuring chloride flux; applying the putative antagonist and then, for example after about one minute, applying glutamate to the cell or membrane and measuring chloride flux; and comparing the chloride flux obtained in the presence of glutamate alone to the flux obtained under similar conditions in the presence of both putative antagonist and glutamate, wherein a decrease in flux of chloride observed in the presence of the putative antagonist relative to the flux observed in the presence of glutamate alone is indicative of an antagonist. In a preferred embodiment, chloride flux is measured by voltage clamp electrophysiology. In another preferred embodiment, the cell is an recombinant baculovirus-infected


Sf


9 cell or a permanently transformed cell line. In another preferred embodiment, the concentrations of agonists, antagonists and GABA are from about 0.1 nM to about 1.0 mM.




Agonists and antagonists against the lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel can also be identified by ligand binding assays. Agonists and antagonists are identified by their ability to displace radiolabeled ligands known to act as agonists or antagonists, respectively. The recombinant glutamate-gated chloride channel, present in an oocyte, cell, or membrane, (preferably a membrane) is incubated with radiolabeled ligand and unlabeled candidate agonist or antagonist. After incubation, the incubation mixture is filtered, and radioactivity retained on the filters is measured by methods known in the art, for example liquid scintillation counting. The ability of the candidate compound to inhibit specific binding of the radiolabeled ligand provides a measure of the compound's agonist or antagonist activity. Suitable ligands include glutamate and ivermectin phosphate.




Agents identified by the foregoing methods may be useful as insecticides. Agents identified by the present methods may be assessed for insecticidal activity by in vitro and in vivo methods known in the art.




Another embodiment of the present invention provides a composition comprising a recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel in a cell membrane. The composition may be a membrane preparation, including a freeze dried membrane preparation, or an intact cell or oocyte expressing the functional lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. The composition is useful, for example, to screen for potential insecticides by functional or specific binding assays. The composition may further comprise appropriate carriers or diluents, including, for example, physiological bufers.




The present invention further provides a kit for identifying agents that modulate the activity of a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. The kit contains a first container containing a recombinant lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel in a cell membrane. The membrane may be in the form of a membrane preparation, including a freeze dried membrane preparation, or an insect cell or oocyte expressing the functional lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel. The kit of the present invention optionally further comprises glutamate. The compositions and kits of the present invention are useful for identifying insecticides.




All references cited herein are incorporated in their entirety.




The following nonlimiting examples serve to further illustrate the present invention.




EXAMPLE 1




RNA Isolation






Heliothis virescens


embryo were isolated from eggs just before hatching obtained from Rhone-Poulenc in-house insectary, and


Heliothis virescens


muscles were obtained by dissecting early 5


th


instar


Heliothis virencens


larva to remove the fat body, gut, and central nervous system. Eggs and remaining larva skins were frozen in liquid nitrogen, and ground to powder. Powders were added to lysis buffer, and homogenized before proceeding with manufacturer's instruction for total RNA isolation using Poly(A) Pure™kit from Ambion. Poly A


+


RNA were selected twice by going through a oligo dT column. The RNA recovered from the column was dissolved in diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC)-treated water. RNA was quantified by spectrophotometry and separated on a denaturing agarose gel to check its integrity before use in RT-PCR and cDNA library construction.




PCR Using Degenerate Primers




Two degenerate oligonucleotides, mw 01 and mw 02, were designed and synthesized from highly conserved regions found in glutamate-gated chloride channel family following the amino acid sequence for


Drosophila melanogaster


GluCl (Cully et al. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271:20187),


Caenorhabditis elegans


GluCl-α and


C.elegans


GluCl-β (Cully et al. (1994) Nature 20:371). Primer mw01 has the sequence 5′-GGATGCC(ATGC)GA(TC)(TC)T(ATGC)TT(TC)TT-3′. (SEQ ID NO.: 1) Primer mw02 has the sequence 5′-TC(ATGC)A(AG)CCA(AG) AA(ATGC)(GC)(AT)(ATGC)ACCC-3′. (SEQ ID NO:2). The primer mw01 was located upstream of the transmembrane (TM) domain 1, while downstream primer mw 02 was located within the TM domain 1. The primer mw 02 was used to synthesize first strand cDNA from mRNA isolated from Heliothis embryo using Boehringer Mannheim's 1


st


Strand cDNA Synthesis Kit for RT-PCR. The cDNA was used as the template for a hot start PCR mix (100 μl) containing: 0.8 mM dNTP's, 2 mM MgCl


2


, 1.2 pmol/μl degenerate primers and 5 U Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene). The a amplification was performed using 35 cycles of denaturation at 94° C. for 1 min, annealing at 53° C. for 1 min and elongation at 72° C. for 1 min. The denaturation step of the first cycle was 5 min long and the elongation step of the last cycle was 10 min (Perkin Elmer, DNA Thermal Cycler 480) (Sambrook et al., 1989, Molecular Cloning—A laboratory Manual. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Press).




PCR generated a 451 base pair (bp) fragment which was cloned into the pCR-Blunt vector (Invitrogen) to produce pE6 and sequenced. The amplified fragment had the following sequence:













5′-GGA TGC CGG ATT TGT TTT TCT CCA ACG AGA AGG AAG GTC ATT TCC ACA AC














A TCA TCA TGC CGA ACG TGT ACA TCC GGA TCT TCC CCA ACG GCA ACG TGC TGT













ACA GCA TCC GAA TCT CCT TGA CGC TCT CGT GCC CCA TGA ACC TCA AGT TGT













ACC CCC TGG ATA AGC AGA CCT GCT CGC TGA GGA TGG CTA GTT ATG GTT GGA













CCA CAG ACG ACT TAG TGT TCC TAT GGA AGG AAG GCG ACC CGG TGC AGG TGG













TGA AGA ACT TAC ACC TGC CTC GGT TCA CGA TGG AGA AGT TCC TCA CTG ACT













ACT GCA ACA GTA AGA CTA ATA CCG GTG AAT ACA GTT GCC TGA AGG TAG ACT













TGC TCT TCA AAC GCG AGT TCA GTT ACT ACC TGA TCC AGA TCT ACA TTC CGT GCT













GCA TGC TGG TCA TCG TGT CCT GGG TCA CCT TTT GGC TCG A-3′(SEQ ID NO:3).











Rapid Amplification of cDNA Ends (RACE-PCR)




RACE reactions (Frohman et al. 1988 Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85:8998), used to obtain the 5′ and 3′ ends of the


Heliothis virescens


mRNA, was performed using synthesized double stranded cDNA as the template. Two microgram of polyA mRNA from either


Heliothis virescens


embryo or muscle were used to synthesize cDNA with a Marathon cDNA amplification kit (C


LONTECH


) following the manufacturer's instructions. Specific primer mw03, derived from 451 bp fragment and having the sequence 5′-CCTGCACCGGGTCGCCTTCCTTCC-3′,(SEQ ID NO:4) along with the adaptor primer (AP1, 5′-CCATCCTAATACGACTCACTATAGGGC-3′)(SEQ ID NO: 5) provided in the kit were used for the amplification of 5′ cDNA end. Primer mw04, derived from 451 bp fragment and having the sequence 5′-TACAGCATCCGAATCTCCTTGACGC,(SEQ ID NO: 6)along with the primer AP1 were used for the amplification of 3′ cDNA end. The PCR reactions were carried under the same conditions as in above section except using “touchdown PCR”, which was performed using 5 cycles of denaturation at 94° C. for 30 sec, annealing and elongation at 72° C. for 4 min; 5 cycles of denaturation at 94° C. for 30 sec, annealing and elongation at 70° C. for 4 min; and 25 cycles of denaturation at 94° C. for 20 sec, annealing and elongation at 68° C. for 4 min. The denaturation step of the first cycle was 1 min at 94° C. One tenth of the PCR reaction (10 μl) was separated on a 1.2% agarose gel containing 1 μl/ml ethidium bromide. The amplified fragments from both 5′RACE and 3′RACE were cloned into pCR2.1 vector (Invitrogen) to produce plasmids designated p5′E4 and p3′M5, respectively. Fragment in p5′E4 has the following sequence:













CGC TGA GCA TTG CGA ACT ACG CCT TCA ACA TTG TTT TTT TAA ACA AGC ACC














GTT TTT TAA TTT TAA AAG CTC TCA TTA AAG GTT TTA TTT GAA GGA AAG TTG TGA













CAG CAA CCG GAG TCG TTT AGA ATG GGA CTT TGT TGA GTC AGA GGA TGG ACA













TCC CGC GGC CAT CAT GCG CCC TCG TAT TGG TGT TGT TAT TTG TCA CCC ATC TCT













CAG AAT GCA TGA ACG GTG GGA AGA TCA ACT TCC GAG AGA AGG AGA AGC AGA













TCC TGG ATC AGA TCC TGG GCC CCG GGA GGT ACG ACG CCA GGA TCA GAC CCT













CGG GGA TCA ACG GCA CCG ATC GGC CAG CGG TAG TGA GCG TCA ATA TAT TTG













TCC GAA CTA TAT CAA AGA TCG ATG ATG TCA CAA TGG AAT ACT CCG TAC AGT













TAA CGT TTC GGG AAC AAT GGT TAG ATG AAC GGC TCA AAT TCA ATA ATC TTG













GAG GTC GCC TCA AAT ACC TGA CGC TTA CCG AAG CCA ACA GAG TCT GGA TGC













CTG ATC TAT TCT TCT CCA ACG AGA AGG AAG GTC ATT TCC ACA ACA TCA TCA













TGC CGA ACG TGT ACA TCC GAA TCT TCC CCA ACG GCA ACG TGC TGT ACA GCA













TCC GAA TCT CCC TGA CGC TCT CGT GCC CCA TGA ACC TCA AGT TGT ACC CCC













TGG ATA AGC AGA CCT GCT CGC TCA GGA TGG CTA GTT ATG GTT GGA CCA CAG













ACG ACT TAG TGT TCC TAT GGA AGG AAG GCG ACC CGG TGC AGG (SEQ ID NO:7).











Fragment in p3′M5 has the following sequence:













5′-CGC TCT CGT GCC CCA TGA ACC














TCA AGT TGT ACC CCC TGG ATA AGC AGA CCT GCT CGC TCA GGA TGG CTA GTT













ATG GTT GGA CCA CAG ACG ACT TAG TGT TCC TAT GGA AGG AAG GCG ACC CGG













TGC AGG TGG TGA AAA ACT TAC ACC TGC CTC GGT TCA CGC TGG AGA AGT TCC













TCA CTG ACT ACT GCA ACA GTA AGA CTA ATA CCG GTG AAT ACA GTT GCC TGA













AGG TAG ACC TGC TCT TCA AAC GCG AGC TCA GTT ACT ACC TGA TCC AGA TCT













ACA TTC CGT GCT GCA TGC TGG TCA TCG TGT CCT GGG TGT CCT TCT CCT GGC TGG ACC













AGG GAG CTG TGC CTG CGA GGG TCT CAC TAG GAG TGA CGA CTT TAC TTA CAA













TGG CGA CCC AGT CGT CAG GCA TCA ACG CGT CCC TAC CAC CGG TGT CCT ACA













CGA AAG CCA TTG ATG TCT GGA CTG GTG TAT GTC TCA CAT TCG TAT TCG GAG













CGC TAC TAG AGT TCG CGC TCG TCA ACT ATG CGT CTC GCT CTG ACA TGC ACC













GAG AGA ACA TGA AGA AAG CGA GAC GGG AGA TGG AAG CAG CCA GCA TGG ATG













CTG CCT CAG ATC TCC TTG ATA CAG ATA GCA ACA CC A CC TTT GCT ATG AAA CCC













TTG GTG CGC GGC GGC GTG GTG GAA TCC AAG ATG CGG CAG TGC GAG ATC CAC













ATC ACC CCG CCG CGG AAG AAC TGC TGC CGC CTG TGG ATG TCC AAG TTC CCC













ACG CGC TCC AAG ATC GAC GTC ATC TCC AGG ATC ACC TTC CCA CTT GTG TTC













GCT CTG TTT AAC CTG GCT TAC


TGA


 ATG AAG CAG AGA AAC TCC TCC TTT GCG













CAC AGA AAT CCT GAA GAG ACT GAA CAA CGA AGT TTC CTA ACC ACA ATC ATT













GCT ATG ATT ATA CCG AGA ATT TAT TTT ATA CTA ATT GTT GTG ACC ACA CGG TTT













TAA CGT AGC TTG GAT CCA CGC GGT GTT AAT ATT TGT TGA TCG CTT AGA ATA













AAT AAA TAT GCT TTG TTG AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA-3′(SEQ ID NO:8).











Generation of Full-Length cDNA by PCR




5′ and 3′-end gene specific primers (GSP) were designed based on the sequence obtained from previous 5′- and 3′-RACE products. 5′ GSP1 has the following sequences: 5′-GCTGAGCATTGCGAACTACGCCTTCAAC 3′, (SEQ ID NO: 9) and 3′ GSP2 has the following sequences: 5′-TAACACCGCGTGGATCCAAGCTACG 3′(SEQ ID NO: 10). Full-length cDNAs from both Heliothis embryo and muscle were generated using 5′ GSP1 and 3′ GSP2 in a long distance PCR reaction which used following cycle condition: 1 cycle of denaturation at 94° C. for 1 min, and 25 cycles of denaturation at 94° C. for 30 sec and annealing and extension at 72° C. for 5 min using pfu as polymerase. The amplified fragments from both Heliothis embryo and muscle were cloned into pCR2.1-TOPO vector (Invitrogen) to generate plasmids HEG3E(4)-2 and HEGM(1)-3. HEG3E(4)-2 has the following sequences (SEQ ID NO: 11):














   1




CTGAGCATTG CGAACTACGC CTTCAACATT GTTTCTTTAA ACAAACACCG TTTTTTAATT














  61




TTAATAGCAC TCATTAAAGG TTTTATTTGA AGGAAAGTTG TCACAGCAAC CGGAGTCGTT













 121




TAGAATGGGA CTTTGTTGAG TCGGAGGATG GACATCCCGC GGCCATCATG CGCCCTCGTA













 181




TTGGTGTTGT TATTTGTCAC CCATCTCTCA GAATGCATGA ACGGTGGGAA GATCAACTTT













 241




CGAGAGAAGG AGAAGCAGAT CCTGGATCAG ATCCTGGGCC CCGGGAGGTA CGACGCCAGG













 301




ATCAGACCCT CGGGGATCAA CGGCACTGAT GGGCCAGGGG TAGTGAGCGT CAATATATTT













 361




GTCCGAACTA TATCAAAGAT CGATGACGTC ACAATGGAAT ACTCCGTACA ATTAACGTTT













 421




CGGGAACAAT GGTTAGATGA ACGGCTCAAA TTCAATAATC TTGGAGGTCG CCTCAAATAC













 481




CTGACACTGA CTGAAGCCAA CAGAGTCTGG ATGCCTGATC TATTCTTCTC CAACGAGAAG













 541




GAAGGTCATT TCCACAACAT CATCATGCCG AACGTGTACA TCCGAATCTT CCCCAACGGC













 601




AACGTGCTGT ACAGCATCCG AATCTCCCTG ACGCTCTCGT GCCCCATGAA CCTCAAGTTG













 661




TACCCCCTGG ATAAGCAGAC CTGCTCGCTC AGGATGGCTA GTTATGGTTG GACCACAGAC













 721




GACTTACTGT TCCTATGGAA GGAAGGCGAC CCGGTGCAGG TGGTGAAAAA CTTACACCTG













 781




CCTCGGTTCA CGCTGGAGAA GTTCCTCACT GACTACTGCA ACAGTAAGAC TAATACCGGT













 841




GAATACAGTT GCCTGAAGGT AGACCTGCTC TTCAAACGCG AGTTCAGTTA CTACCTGATC













 901




CAGATCTACA TTCCGTGCTG CATGCTGGTC ATCGTGTCCT GGGTGTCCTT CTGGCTGGAC













 961




CAGGGAGCTG TGCCTGCGAG GGTCTCACTA GGAGTGACGA CTTTACTTAC AATGGCGACC













1021




CAGTCGTCAG GCATCAACGC GTCCCTAGGA CCGGTGTCCT ACACGAAAGC CATTGATGTC













1081




TGGACTGGGT TATGTCTCAC ATTCGTATTC GGAGCGCTAC TAGAGTTTGC GCTGCTCAAC













1141




TATGCGTCTC GCTCTGACAT GCACCGAGAG AACATGAAGA AAGCGAGACG GGAGATGGAA













1201




GCAGCCAGCA TGGATGCTGC CTCAGATCTC CTTGATACAG ATAGCAACAC CACCTTTGCT













1261




ATGAAACCCT TGGTGCGCGG CGGCGTGGTG GAATCCAAGA TGCGGCAGTG CGAGATCCAC













1321




ATCACCCCGC CGCGGAAGAA CTGTGGATGT CCAAGTTCCC CCAAGTTCCC CACGCGCTCC













1381




AAGAGGATAG ACGTCATCTC CAGGATCACC TTCCCACTTG TGTTCGCTCT GTTTAACCTG













1441




GCTTACTGAA TGAAGCAGAG AAACTCCTCC TTTGCGCACA GAAATCCTGA AGAGACTGAA













1501




CAACGAAGTT TCCTAACCAC AATCATTGCT ATGATTATAC CGAGAATTTA TTTTATACTA













1561




ATTGTTGTGA CCACACGGTT TTAACGTAGC TTGGATCCAC GCGGTGTTA











HEGM(1)-3 has the following sequence (SEQ ID NO: 12):














   1




AGGTGCGGAC GTCTGCACTT GCGAATCGAA GTGATAGAAA ATAGTTCGAT GAATACGGGA














  61




GTTTGAGTGG AGTGATTTAT AATTCGGAGG ATGGACATCC CGCGGCCATC ATGCGCCCTC













 121




GTATTGGTGT TGTTATTTGT CACCCATCTC TCAGAATGCA TGAACGGTGG GAAGATCAAC













 181




TTTCGAGAGA AGGAGAAGCA GATCCTGGAT CAGATCCTGG GCCCCGGGAG GTACGACGCC













 241




AGGATCAGAC CCTCGGGGAT CAACGGCACT GGCTATGCGC CAACGTTAGT CCATGTCAAC













 301




ATGTATCTAC GGTCCATCAG CAAAATAGAT GATTACAAAA TGGAATACTC CGTACAATTA













 361




ACGTTTCGGG AACAATGGTT AGATGAACGG CTCAAATTCA ATAATCTTGG AGGTCGCCTC













 421




AAATACCTGA CACTGACTGA AGCCAACAGA GTCTGGATGC CTGATCTATT CTTCTCCAAC













 481




GAGAAGGAAG GTCATTTCCA CAACATCATC ATGCCGAACG TGTACATCCG GATCTTCCCC













 541




AACGGCAACG TGCTGTACAG CATCCGAATC TCCCTGACGC TCTCGTGCCC CATGAACCTC













 601




AAGTTGTACC CCCTGGATAA GCAGACCTGC TCGCTCAGGA TGGCTAGTTA TGGTTGGACC













 661




ACAGACGACT TAGTGTTCCT ATGGAAGGAA GGCGACCCGG TGCAGGTGGT GAAAAACTTA













 721




CACCTGCCTC GGTTCACGCT GGAGAAGTTC CTCACTGACT ACTGCAACAG TAACACTAAT













 781




ACCGGTGAAT ACAGTTGCCT GAAGGTAGAC CTGCTCTTCA AACGCGAGTT CAGTTACTAC













 841




CTGATCCAGA TATACATTCC GTGCTGCATG CTGGTCATCG TGTCCTGGGT GTCCTTCTGG













 901




CTGGACCAGG GAGCTGTGCC TGCGAGGGTC TCACTAGGAG TGACGACTTT ACTTACAATG













 961




GCGACCCAGT CGTCAGGCAT CAACGCGTCC CTACCACCGG TGTCCTACAC GAAAGCCATT













1021




GATGTCTGGA CTGGGTTATG TCTCACATTC GTATTCGGAC CGCTACTAGA GTTTGCGCTC













1081




GTCAACTATG CGTCTCGCTC TGACATGCAC CGAGAGAACA TGAAGAAAGC GAGACGGGAG













1141




ATGGAAGCAG CCAGCATGGA TGCTGCCTCA GATCTCCTTG ATACAGATAG CAACACCACC













1201




TTTGCTATGA AACCCTTGGT GCGCGGCGGC GTGGTGGAAT CCAAGATGCG GCAGTGCGAG













1261




ATCCACATCA CCCCGCCGCG GAAGAACTGC TGCCGCCTGT GGATGTCCAA GTTCCCCACG













1321




CGCTCCAAGA GGATAGACGT CATCTCCAGG ATCACCTTCC CACTTGTGTT CGCTCTGTTT













1381




AACCTGGCTT ACTGTTGGGG GGGCAAGAGG GGGGCGGTGG CTGCTACCAT GTCTTGCAGG













1441




AGCGATGAGA CTATTAATGC TATTTATAAG CTGATACAGA ATGAAGCAGA GAAACTCCTC













1501




CTTTGCGCAC AGAAATCCTG AAGAGACTGA ACAACGAAGT TTCCTAACCA CAATCATTGC













1561




TATGATTATA CCGAGAATTT ATTTTATACT AATTGTTGTG ACCACACGGT TTTAAGCTAG













1621




CTTGGATCCA CGCGGTGTTA











EXAMPLE 2




Isolation of Full-length Clone by Screening of cDNA Library




Compared to the glutamate-gated chloride channel clones from Drosophila and


C. elegans, clone HEG


3(E)-2 has a stop codon within the M4 transmembrane domain, whereas clone HEGM(1)-3 has an unusual long 3′ sequence after the M4 transmembrane domain. It is unclear whether these two clones resulted from different RNA splicing or due to the errors introduced by PCR polymerase during the RACE reaction. cDNA libraries of


Heliothis virescens


embryo and muscle were constructed using 7.5 μg of each of isolated polyA mRNA with Stratagene's cDNA Synthesis kit. The cDNAs were made according to the manufacturer's instructions and then cloned into the lambda ZAP expression cloning vector and packaged with Gigapack III Gold packaging system (Stratagene) following the manufacturer's instructions. Thus two non-amplified libraries of 5×10


5


recombinants were made and then amplified.




Clone HEG3(E)-2 insert was cut out from its vector by SacI enzyme, and was labeled with


32


P using Boehringer Mannheim's Random Primed DNA Labeling Kit (Ca # 1004760). Part of the amplified


Heliothis virescens


embryo library was plated out on 10 large 150-mm NZY agar plate at 50,000 pfu/plate. Phage particles were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. Membranes were denatured in a 1.5 M NaCl and 0.5 M NaOH denaturation solution for 5 minutes, neutralized in a 1.5 M NaCl and 0.5 M Tris-Cl (pH 8.0) neutralization solution for 5 minutes and rinsed in a 0.2 Tris-Cl (pH 7.5) and 2×SSC buffer for 2 minute. DNA was crosslinked to the membranes using the Stratalinker UV crosslinker (CL-100 Ultraviolet Crosslinker, UVP). Prehybridization was performed in a 50 ml solutions containing: 25 ml of formamide, 12.5 ml of 20×SSC, 0.5 ml of 10% SDS and 5 ml of Derhardt solution at 42C for 3-4 hours. Labeled probes were added to the prehybridization solution at 1.84×10


5


dpm/ml 32P and hybridization was continued at 42° C. for 24 hours. Membranes were washed twice for 15 minutes in low stringency conditions (2×SSC/0.1%SDS, room temperature), twice for 15 minutes in high stringency conditions (0.2×SSC/0.1%SDS, 42C), and once for 15 minutes in higher stringency conditions (0.1×SSC/0.1%SDS, 42C). Ten positive clones were identified and plaques were purified, and secondary and tertiary screenings were performed using the same primer with positive clones to make sure that each positive plaque was very well separated. The phagemids containing the inserts were excised following the manufacturer's instruction (Stratagene). Two clones which have the same full-length sequences of glutamate-gated chloride channels, were designated HEGE2. The following DNA sequence (SEQ ID NO: 13) for clone HEGE2 was determined:














   1




ACCAGGCGAA CTACGCCTTC AACATTGTTT TTTTAAACAA ACACCGTTTT TTAATTTTAA














  61




TAGCTCTCAT TAAAGGTTTT ATTTGAAGGA AAGTTGTGAC AGCAACCGGA GTCGTTTAGA













 121




ATGGGACTTT GTTGAGTCGG AGGATGGACA TCCCGCGGCC ATCATGCGCC CTCGTATTGG













 181




TGTTGTTATT TGTCACCCAT CTCTCAGAAT GCATGAACGG TGGGAAGATC AACTTTCGAG













 241




AGAAGGAGAA GCAGATCCTG GATCAGATCC TGGGCCCCGG GAGGTACGAC GCCAGGATCA













 301




GACCCTCGGG GATCAACGGC ACTGATGGGC CAGCGGTAGT GAGCGTCAAT ATATTTGTCC













 361




GAAGTATATC AAAGATCGAT GACGTCACAA TGGAATACTC CGTACAGTTA ACGTTTCGGG













 421




AACAATGGTT AGATGAACGG CTCAAATTCA ATAATCTTGG AGGTCGCCTC AAATACCTGA













 481




CACTGACCGA AGCCAACAGA GTCTGGATGC CTGATCTATT CTTCTCCAAC GAGAAGGAAG













 541




GTCATTTCCA CAACATCATC ATGCCGAACG TGTACATCCG GATCTTCCCC AACGGCAACG













 601




TGCTGTACAG CATCCGAATC TCCTTGACGC TCTCGTGCCC CATGAACCTC AAGTTGTACC













 661




CCCTGGATAA GCAGACCTGC TCGCTCAGGA TGGCTAGTTA TGGTTGGACC ACAGACGACT













 721




TAGTGTTCCT ATGGAAGGAA GGCGACCCGG TGCAGGTGGT GAACAACTTA CACCTGCCTC













 781




GGTTCACGCT GGAGAACTTC CTCACTGACT ACTGCAACAG TAAGACTAAT ACCGGTGAAT













 841




ACAGTTGCCT GAAGGTAGAC TTGCTCTTCA AACGCGAGTT CAGTTACTAC CTGATCCAGA













 901




TCTACATTCC GTGCTGCATG CTGGTCATCG TGTCCTGGGT GTCCTTCTGG CTGGACCAGG













 961




GAGCTGTGCC TGCGAGGGTC TCACTAGGAG TGACGACTTT ACTTACAATG GCGACCCAGT













1021




CGTCAGGCAT CAACGCGTCC CTACCACCGG TGTCCTACAC GAAAGCCATT GACGTCTGGA













1081




CTGGTGTATG TCTCACATTC GTATTCGGAG CGCTACTAGA GTTCGCGCTC GTCAACTATG













1141




CGTCTCGCTC TGACATGCAC CGAGAGAACA TGAAGAAAGC GAGACGGGAG ATGGAAGCAG













1201




CCAGCATGGA TGCTGCCTCA GATCTCCTAG ACACAGATAG CAACACCACC TTTGCTATGA













1261




AACCCTTGGT GCGCGGCGGC GTGGTGGAAT CCAAGATGCG GCAGTGCGAG ATCCACATCA













1321




CCCCGCCGCG GAAGAACTGC TGCCGCCTGT CCATGTCCAA GTTCCCCACG CGCTCCAAGA













1381




GGATCGACGT CATCTCCAGG ATCACCTTCC CACTTGTGTT CGCTCTGTTT AACCTGGCTT













1441




ACTGGTCGAC GTACCTGTTC CGCGACGAGG ACGAGGAGAA GTGATTCTCC GAGTCCCTGG













1501




AGAGGGGCGT GGGGCCGCGC GTGCAGCTGG TGGCGGCCGT CGTGATGCCC TACGTGCTGT













1561




TCGTGGTGGC GTACTCGCTG TGCTTCCGCG CGCGCGCCCC GCCCCCTTCG CCCCCGCCCG













1621




CGCCCGCGCC CGCGCCCGCG CCCGCACCCT CCCGCCGCAG CGCGCGCGCA CGCACACAAG













1681




CACACCCACC TAGCCCGCTC TAGCGAACTC ACCCCATTCA TTATCGTGAC ATATTATATT













1741




ATCGTGTATT TTAATCGACG TCTTCCTCGT GGCAGCGTTA TTCCCACTCA GTATTCGATG













1801




GCGTTAGTGT AATTAGTAAA GCTCAAGTGT CTATTTGTAT ATATATGTGA CCCCCGTGCC













1861




AGTTTAGACC AAGCCTCCGT TTTTAAATTG AAGCAGTTCG AGAAAAACGG TAAAAATAGA













1921




CTCAATTTTG ATTGGTCATC TAAACAGCAG AACTTTTATT CGGCACTTAT AAAGTCCTCA













1981




ATTATTTGTG TACAAAAATA AATATTTTAC TTTCCGAGAA TTAAAAATTT TCGATAATTT













2041




TACCAATGAT ATGACTCCTT GTATGGATTC GTATGTAATG TAAACCTAGG TTAAGATATA













2101




AGAGGAATCC CAGAGGTTCC CGCATATTAC TTTAGCCTTT AAAGTAAGGT AAATAAGGAC













2161




TAGAATGGCA CTAATGTGTA GTGGAAGTGG GGTATTATTT AGTAGTTTTC ACTCTACAGT













2221




ACGTGAACTG GACTAGATCT ACTAGCAAAT AGAGTTGATC AATTTTCATG TCGAAATGTT













2281




CACAGATATT GTATAAACCG CTGGAGGTAA ACAGCTATCA ACAATGTAAC ACCAAATACC













2341




ATCAGAATCA AGCAAAACCA TGGAAATTTT GCTAATCGAA AAGTTGTAAC TGTTTATCTA













2401




TGGCAGGTAT AATTGGCCTA GTAATGTATC GTGTAGTATC ATTTACAACA CATATTAACT













2461




ATTAACCACA TTATGTGAAA GAAGGAATTT ATAAAAAAAA CCTTATTAAA TATATATTAG













2521




ATAAGTATTA TTAATTGGAT ATTCTCTTGC TGGGGATTTT AATATGAATC TTACCTTTAA













2581




ATAAGTTTGA TCTCACTAGA CGTTGCAAAT GGATACCCCA AATACCTTTT CCGCATTAAA













2641




AGGTATTATT TTAACAAATG TATTCTTCCC CGTCAATGTT TTAAGACTAC GTATCTACAT













2701




AAAATGATGT ATTGTTCATA CAATACTATT TCAAAATGCA AGAACAACGT AAAGTGCATT













2761




TCATTGATGT TTGTGTATGT AGATGACATT AGTATTTTAC CCAAAAATAC TGATATTAAA













2821




ATTCCCAGTA AGATTCGTAG GTAAATGGTA AACGTGTAAA TAGTTGGGCC TACAACTTTC













2881




TACACCTGTG TCGCTCAGTG TACAGTTACC TATATTTAAT ATTACAATTA TATCATTATT













2941




AACGAATGAT AAGATTTTAT TAACATTAAT TTCTCTGTCT GAACGTATCA CTGTAAATAT













3001




TACTAAATGT TTCCTAATTA CATTATTCAT ACATATATTA TCATCCCTTG AGCTATAGTT













3061




GCAAAGTATT CCAAAACCAC AATGAAAATA AAATTTCAAT TTACTTCACG ATCACCAAAT













3121




TGTGAAAACC TGGTTGTTCT GAATTCATTT AACAATTAGT TTTTACTTTG AATCCATGGC













3181




TCAAGGGACA TCCTAAGGAT ATTCATTGAA ATCTATTTAG AATCTCGTGT ATGTATCATG













3241




ACACCTTCAA ATAAAATATC ACTAATGCTG TGTTCGGCTA TTAGATACAA TAAGTCGTAC













3301




ATATTAACGT AAGCACATTC GTTTTTATTA TGCGGCGGAG AGAACGCATC TGTTTCTATA













3361




ACGAAAGGGT GGCCATTATC GGCTATATCA TCTTGCTTGG TCTGTATAAA AATAAGAGTC













3421




AAAGACTCGG GGGAAACCCC TATATGTATA CTATCATAAC CGTTATCCTT ATTTTGACAA













3481




AGCTCTGGGA AACGAAATAG CATTTTGTTT CAATTACACA ATTCTTGCTC ATTTTTCTCT













3541




TCCGCCTTTT ATTTCAATTT AGGTGTTGCC CACTGTGCGC AATACTCTAA TGGCTTAGAA













3601




TTATCCTTAA TATATATTCT CGGGCTGTGA CGAGGTGTAG CATCTGCATT ATTATATTAA













3661




TGTCATTTCG TTTGCCATTC GTTGTATGTA AGGAAATATT AGCCTATGTC CAACGCTCAA













3721




AATCTCATAG ACGTATTAGG CACACATAAG TGTACCTTTT CGTATGTATG TAAATTATTG













3781




GAGACTCAAT GTCTTAGTTG GTGCTATATA TACTACGATC CGAGGAGAAT GTACCCAGTA













3841




GTTTACTCAT ACATAACGCC ACTGATATCT TGTGGAGGAA ATATTATCTG CGAGACAAGT













3901




AGACATTAGT TAAGTTTACA TATTTACAAT AAATGTTTCC ATTATTAGGA TATAACATAT













3961




GAATGTGTTA CTGTTGAAAG CAGCTTCTCA AGGTACCACC AGTAATTCGG AGATACTTGT













4021




AGGATTTGCA TTCGATAAAC AACTTATACT AAAACGAAGA TTTGACTGAA TCTAAACCGC













4081




AAATACTGTG GTCAAAATTA TTAAACACTT TCAATACATG TTGTACGCAT GTTTCTGTAA













4141




TTTCACATTT AATTGTAAAG TCAATTAAAT CACTGTATAA TAATACATTT TCAACATATC













4201




TCTCACTGTT AAGATTTCGG TTGGTCCAAC GACAGAATCA AATCGCAACG TAATGATGAT













4261




CCGGGCAAAA CTAACAACTA GATAGATCTC TTAAATGATT ACGTTGAAGT GGAAGAGGTG













4321




ATGTATGAAG GAAGGTAGGA TTAAGTAACA CTGTATAATA TATTGACCAT AATTACGATT













4381




TTAGAAGTCA TAATGGACGG TTTACCTCTT AAGATTATAC AGTAAAGGTA GATAGTTTCA













4441




TTCGTAAGCT ATGTTGTACT CGATTGGTAT GACATAACTA ATGACTGAGC TTTGTCATCT













4501




ACTACAACCC GAGGGCGAAT ACCTCCTTCT TCTACCATTC CCATTTAATT ATAAAGAAAC













4561




ATTGTAAAAA ATGATTTAAT AAAATATCCC AAATATCTTA AAACAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAA













4621




A











Sequencing indicated that HEGE2 encoded a full length


Heliothis virescens


glutamate-gated chloride channel clone directionally cloned into the EcoRI and XhoI sites of phagemid pBluescript SK (+/−). The coding sequence starts at 144 bp and ends at 1484 bp, and encodes a polypeptide of 444 amino acids having the predicted sequence (SEQ ID NO: 14):













MDIPRPSCALVLLFVTHLSECMNGGKINFREKEKQILDQILGPGRYDARIRPSGINGTDGP














AVVSVNIFVRSISKIDDVTMEYSVQLTFREQWLDERLKFNNLGGRLKYLTLTEANRVW













MPDLFFSNEKEGHFHNIIMPNVYIRIFPNGNVLYSIRISLTLSCPMNLKLYPLDKQTCSLR













MASYGWTTDDLVFLWKEGDPVQVVKNLHLPRFTLEKFLTDYCNSKTNTGEYSCLKVD













LLFKREFSYYLIQIYIPCCMLVIVSWVSFWLDQGAVPARVLLGVTTLLTMATQSSGINAS













LPPVSYTKAIDVWTGVCLTFVFGALLESRFVNYASRSDMHRENMKKARREMEAASMD













AASDLLDTDSNTTFAMKPLVRGGVVESKMRQCEIHITPPRKNCCLWMSKFPTRSKRID













VISRITFPLVFALFNLAYWSTYLFRDEDEEK











BLAST Search




BLAST search (http://www.ncbi.nlm.gov) and amino acid sequence comparison were used to identify glutamate-gated chloride channel-like fragments from the PCR products amplified with degenerate primers, the PCR products obtained from RACE and clones screened from embryo cDNA library. BLAST was also used to determine the orientation and the position of the amplified products compared to the entire cDNA sequence.




EXAMPLE 3




Expression of Nucleic Acid Encoding Lepidopteran Glutamate-gated Chloride Channel in Xenopus Oocytes:




Messenger RNA was produced from the cDNA template of HEGE2 by in vitro transcription with the Ambion mMESSAGE mMACHINE IN VITRO TRANSCRIPTION KIT (Ambion, Inc.). The mRNA was injected into oocytes by the following procedure.




Frogs were anesthetized in a 2 gram/liter solution of 3-amino benzoic acid ethyl ester for thirty minutes, after which oocytes were surgically removed from the abdominal cavity. Follicles were digested by collagenase treatment under sterile conditions by standard methods. Oocytes were injected with 50 nl of 1 μg/μl mRNA by glass electrodes.




After a 24 hr incubation, two-electrode voltage clamp recordings were made. Recordings were made using a Dagan, TEV200 voltage clamp interfaced with a MacLab4 data acquisition system running the MacLab Chart data acquisition/analysis software. Oocytes were positioned under a dissection scope under constant perfusion with frog saline (96 mM of NaCl, 2 mM of KCl, 1 mM of MgCl


2


, 1.8 mM of CaCl


2


and 10 mM of HEPES, pH 7.5) using a Razel syringe perfusion pump. Model A99-FY at 93.9 cc/hr. Glass electrodes (A-M Systems. Inc. 1.5 mm×0.86 mm) were filled with 3 M KCl and resistance (a function of the diameter of the channel opening) was measured to be between 0.7 and 1.5 mega ohms. Both electrodes were inserted into the oocyte at opposite sides, the resting potential was recorded and the voltage clamp turned on. Oocytes were held at a resting potential at −80 mV. Control responses of glutamate were obtained by stopping the perfusion of saline and perfusing with a known concentration of glutamate in frog saline. The average of several glutamate applications was taken as the maximal chloride current for that particular glutamate dose. The effect of 100 micromolar glutamate on the lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel expressed in Xenopus oocytes is depicted in FIG.


1


. Glutamate application is indicated by the arrow marked “on”. The data in

FIG. 1

indicate that 100 uM glutamate activate a membrane current in Xenopus oocytes injected with 50 ng of HEGE2 mRNA. This example demonstrates that the expression of mRNA corresponding to the cDNA in HEGE2 results in a functional glutamate gated chloride channel in oocytes. One micromolar of Ivermectin phosphate also slowly and irreversibly activated current in oocytes.







14




1


19


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Oligonucleotide Primer mw 01





1
ggatgccnga yytnttytt 19




2


19


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Oligonucleotide Primer mw 02





2
tcnarccara answnaccc 19




3


451


DNA


Heliothis virescens



3
ggatgccgga tttgtttttc tccaacgaga aggaaggtca tttccacaac atcatcatgc 60
cgaacgtgta catccggatc ttccccaacg gcaacgtgct gtacagcatc cgaatctcct 120
tgacgctctc gtgccccatg aacctcaagt tgtaccccct ggataagcag acctgctcgc 180
tcaggatggc tagttatggt tggaccacag acgacttagt gttcctatgg aaggaaggcg 240
acccggtgca ggtggtgaag aacttacacc tgcctcggtt cacgctggag aagttcctca 300
ctgactactg caacagtaag actaataccg gtgaatacag ttgcctgaag gtagacttgc 360
tcttcaaacg cgagttcagt tactacctga tccagatcta cattccgtgc tgcatgctgg 420
tcatcgtgtc ctgggtcacc ttttggctcg a 451




4


24


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Oligonucleotide Primer mw 03





4
cctgcaccgg gtcgccttcc ttcc 24




5


27


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Oligonucleotide Adaptor Primer, AP1





5
ccatcctaat acgactcact atagggc 27




6


25


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Oligonucleotide Primer mw 04





6
tacagcatcc gaatctcctt gacgc 25




7


762


DNA


Heliothis virescens



7
cgctgagcat tgcgaactac gccttcaaca ttgttttttt aaacaagcac cgttttttaa 60
ttttaaaagc tctcattaaa ggttttattt gaaggaaagt tgtgacagca accggagtcg 120
tttagaatgg gactttgttg agtcagagga tggacatccc gcggccatca tgcgccctcg 180
tattggtgtt gttatttgtc acccatctct cagaatgcat gaacggtggg aagatcaact 240
tccgagagaa ggagaagcag atcctggatc agatcctggg ccccgggagg tacgacgcca 300
ggatcagacc ctcggggatc aacggcaccg atgggccagc ggtagtgagc gtcaatatat 360
ttgtccgaag tatatcaaag atcgatgatg tcacaatgga atactccgta cagttaacgt 420
ttcgggaaca atggttagat gaacggctca aattcaataa tcttggaggt cgcctcaaat 480
acctgacgct taccgaagcc aacagagtct ggatgcctga tctattcttc tccaacgaga 540
aggaaggtca tttccacaac atcatcatgc cgaacgtgta catccgaatc ttccccaacg 600
gcaacgtgct gtacagcatc cgaatctccc tgacgctctc gtgccccatg aacctcaagt 660
tgtaccccct ggataagcag acctgctcgc tcaggatggc tagttatggt tggaccacag 720
acgacttagt gttcctatgg aaggaaggcg acccggtgca gg 762




8


1052


DNA


Heliothis virescens



8
cgctctcgtg ccccatgaac ctcaagttgt accccctgga taagcagacc tgctcgctca 60
ggatggctag ttatggttgg accacagacg acttagtgtt cctatggaag gaaggcgacc 120
cggtgcaggt ggtgaaaaac ttacacctgc ctcggttcac gctggagaag ttcctcactg 180
actactgcaa cagtaagact aataccggtg aatacagttg cctgaaggta gacctgctct 240
tcaaacgcga gctcagttac tacctgatcc agatctacat tccgtgctgc atgctggtca 300
tcgtgtcctg ggtgtccttc tggctggacc agggagctgt gcctgcgagg gtctcactag 360
gagtgacgac tttacttaca atggcgaccc agtcgtcagg catcaacgcg tccctaccac 420
cggtgtccta cacgaaagcc attgatgtct ggactggtgt atgtctcaca ttcgtattcg 480
gagcgctact agagttcgcg ctcgtcaact atgcgtctcg ctctgacatg caccgagaga 540
acatgaagaa agcgagacgg gagatggaag cagccagcat ggatgctgcc tcagatctcc 600
ttgatacaga tagcaacacc acctttgcta tgaaaccctt ggtgcgcggc ggcgtggtgg 660
aatccaagat gcggcagtgc gagatccaca tcaccccgcc gcggaagaac tgctgccgcc 720
tgtggatgtc caagttcccc acgcgctcca agaggataga cgtcatctcc aggatcacct 780
tcccacttgt gttcgctctg tttaacctgg cttactgaat gaagcagaga aactcctcct 840
ttgcgcacag aaatcctgaa gagactgaac aacgaagttt cctaaccaca atcattgcta 900
tgattatacc gagaatttat tttatactaa ttgttgtgac cacacggttt taacgtagct 960
tggatccacg cggtgttaat atttgttgat cgcttagaat aaataaatat gctttgttga 1020
aaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaa aa 1052




9


28


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Oligonucleotide Gene Specific Primer 1 (GSP1)





9
gctgagcatt gcgaactacg ccttcaac 28




10


25


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Oligonucleotide Gene Specific Primer 2 (GSP2)





10
taacaccgcg tggatccaag ctacg 25




11


1609


DNA


Artificial Sequence




PCR amplified fragment of Heliothis DNA cloned
into pCR2.1-TOPO vector (Invitrogen)






11
ctgagcattg cgaactacgc cttcaacatt gtttctttaa acaaacaccg ttttttaatt 60
ttaatagcac tcattaaagg ttttatttga aggaaagttg tgacagcaac cggagtcgtt 120
tagaatggga ctttgttgag tcggaggatg gacatcccgc ggccatcatg cgccctcgta 180
ttggtgttgt tatttgtcac ccatctctca gaatgcatga acggtgggaa gatcaacttt 240
cgagagaagg agaagcagat cctggatcag atcctgggcc ccgggaggta cgacgccagg 300
atcagaccct cggggatcaa cggcactgat gggccagcgg tagtgagcgt caatatattt 360
gtccgaagta tatcaaagat cgatgacgtc acaatggaat actccgtaca attaacgttt 420
cgggaacaat ggttagatga acggctcaaa ttcaataatc ttggaggtcg cctcaaatac 480
ctgacactga ctgaagccaa cagagtctgg atgcctgatc tattcttctc caacgagaag 540
gaaggtcatt tccacaacat catcatgccg aacgtgtaca tccgaatctt ccccaacggc 600
aacgtgctgt acagcatccg aatctccctg acgctctcgt gccccatgaa cctcaagttg 660
taccccctgg ataagcagac ctgctcgctc aggatggcta gttatggttg gaccacagac 720
gacttagtgt tcctatggaa ggaaggcgac ccggtgcagg tggtgaaaaa cttacacctg 780
cctcggttca cgctggagaa gttcctcact gactactgca acagtaagac taataccggt 840
gaatacagtt gcctgaaggt agacctgctc ttcaaacgcg agttcagtta ctacctgatc 900
cagatctaca ttccgtgctg catgctggtc atcgtgtcct gggtgtcctt ctggctggac 960
cagggagctg tgcctgcgag ggtctcacta ggagtgacga ctttacttac aatggcgacc 1020
cagtcgtcag gcatcaacgc gtccctacca ccggtgtcct acacgaaagc cattgatgtc 1080
tggactgggt tatgtctcac attcgtattc ggagcgctac tagagtttgc gctcgtcaac 1140
tatgcgtctc gctctgacat gcaccgagag aacatgaaga aagcgagacg ggagatggaa 1200
gcagccagca tggatgctgc ctcagatctc cttgatacag atagcaacac cacctttgct 1260
atgaaaccct tggtgcgcgg cggcgtggtg gaatccaaga tgcggcagtg cgagatccac 1320
atcaccccgc cgcggaagaa ctgctgccgc ctgtggatgt ccaagttccc cacgcgctcc 1380
aagaggatag acgtcatctc caggatcacc ttcccacttg tgttcgctct gtttaacctg 1440
gcttactgaa tgaagcagag aaactcctcc tttgcgcaca gaaatcctga agagactgaa 1500
caacgaagtt tcctaaccac aatcattgct atgattatac cgagaattta ttttatacta 1560
attgttgtga ccacacggtt ttaacgtagc ttggatccac gcggtgtta 1609




12


1640


DNA


Artificial Sequence




PCR amplified fragment of Heliothis DNA cloned
into pCR2.1-TOPO vector (Invitrogen)






12
aggtgcggac gtctgcactt gcgaatcgaa gtgatagaaa atagttcgat gaatacggga 60
gtttgagtgg agtgatttat aattcggagg atggacatcc cgcggccatc atgcgccctc 120
gtattggtgt tgttatttgt cacccatctc tcagaatgca tgaacggtgg gaagatcaac 180
tttcgagaga aggagaagca gatcctggat cagatcctgg gccccgggag gtacgacgcc 240
aggatcagac cctcggggat caacggcact ggctatgcgc caacgttagt ccatgtcaac 300
atgtatctac ggtccatcag caaaatagat gattacaaaa tggaatactc cgtacaatta 360
acgtttcggg aacaatggtt agatgaacgg ctcaaattca ataatcttgg aggtcgcctc 420
aaatacctga cactgactga agccaacaga gtctggatgc ctgatctatt cttctccaac 480
gagaaggaag gtcatttcca caacatcatc atgccgaacg tgtacatccg gatcttcccc 540
aacggcaacg tgctgtacag catccgaatc tccctgacgc tctcgtgccc catgaacctc 600
aagttgtacc ccctggataa gcagacctgc tcgctcagga tggctagtta tggttggacc 660
acagacgact tagtgttcct atggaaggaa ggcgacccgg tgcaggtggt gaaaaactta 720
cacctgcctc ggttcacgct ggagaagttc ctcactgact actgcaacag taagactaat 780
accggtgaat acagttgcct gaaggtagac ctgctcttca aacgcgagtt cagttactac 840
ctgatccaga tctacattcc gtgctgcatg ctggtcatcg tgtcctgggt gtccttctgg 900
ctggaccagg gagctgtgcc tgcgagggtc tcactaggag tgacgacttt acttacaatg 960
gcgacccagt cgtcaggcat caacgcgtcc ctaccaccgg tgtcctacac gaaagccatt 1020
gatgtctgga ctgggttatg tctcacattc gtattcggag cgctactaga gtttgcgctc 1080
gtcaactatg cgtctcgctc tgacatgcac cgagagaaca tgaagaaagc gagacgggag 1140
atggaagcag ccagcatgga tgctgcctca gatctccttg atacagatag caacaccacc 1200
tttgctatga aacccttggt gcgcggcggc gtggtggaat ccaagatgcg gcagtgcgag 1260
atccacatca ccccgccgcg gaagaactgc tgccgcctgt ggatgtccaa gttccccacg 1320
cgctccaaga ggatagacgt catctccagg atcaccttcc cacttgtgtt cgctctgttt 1380
aacctggctt actgttgggg gggcaagagg ggggcggtgg ctgctaccat gtcttgcagg 1440
agcgatgaga ctattaatgc tatttataag ctgatacaga atgaagcaga gaaactcctc 1500
ctttgcgcac agaaatcctg aagagactga acaacgaagt ttcctaacca caatcattgc 1560
tatgattata ccgagaattt attttatact aattgttgtg accacacggt tttaagctag 1620
cttggatcca cgcggtgtta 1640




13


4621


DNA


Heliothis virescens




unsure




(764)...(764)




n is a, t, g, or c





13
accaggcgaa ctacgccttc aacattgttt ttttaaacaa acaccgtttt ttaattttaa 60
tagctctcat taaaggtttt atttgaagga aagttgtgac agcaaccgga gtcgtttaga 120
atgggacttt gttgagtcgg aggatggaca tcccgcggcc atcatgcgcc ctcgtattgg 180
tgttgttatt tgtcacccat ctctcagaat gcatgaacgg tgggaagatc aactttcgag 240
agaaggagaa gcagatcctg gatcagatcc tgggccccgg gaggtacgac gccaggatca 300
gaccctcggg gatcaacggc actgatgggc cagcggtagt gagcgtcaat atatttgtcc 360
gaagtatatc aaagatcgat gacgtcacaa tggaatactc cgtacagtta acgtttcggg 420
aacaatggtt agatgaacgg ctcaaattca ataatcttgg aggtcgcctc aaatacctga 480
cactgaccga agccaacaga gtctggatgc ctgatctatt cttctccaac gagaaggaag 540
gtcatttcca caacatcatc atgccgaacg tgtacatccg gatcttcccc aacggcaacg 600
tgctgtacag catccgaatc tccttgacgc tctcgtgccc catgaacctc aagttgtacc 660
ccctggataa gcagacctgc tcgctcagga tggctagtta tggttggacc acagacgact 720
tagtgttcct atggaaggaa ggcgacccgg tgcaggtggt gaanaactta cacctgcctc 780
ggttcacgct ggagaagttc ctcactgact actgcaacag taagactaat accggtgaat 840
acagttgcct gaaggtagac ttgctcttca aacgcgagtt cagttactac ctgatccaga 900
tctacattcc gtgctgcatg ctggtcatcg tgtcctgggt gtccttctgg ctggaccagg 960
gagctgtgcc tgcgagggtc tcactaggag tgacgacttt acttacaatg gcgacccagt 1020
cgtcaggcat caacgcgtcc ctaccaccgg tgtcctacac gaaagccatt gacgtctgga 1080
ctggtgtatg tctcacattc gtattcggag cgctactaga gttcgcgctc gtcaactatg 1140
cgtctcgctc tgacatgcac cgagagaaca tgaagaaagc gagacgggag atggaagcag 1200
ccagcatgga tgctgcctca gatctcctag acacagatag caacaccacc tttgctatga 1260
aacccttggt gcgcggcggc gtggtggaat ccaagatgcg gcagtgcgag atccacatca 1320
ccccgccgcg gaagaactgc tgccgcctgt ggatgtccaa gttccccacg cgctccaaga 1380
ggatagacgt catctccagg atcaccttcc cacttgtgtt cgctctgttt aacctggctt 1440
actggtcgac gtacctgttc cgcgacgagg acgaggagaa gtgattctcc gagtccctgg 1500
agaggggcgt ggggccgcgc gtgcagctgg tggcggccgt cgtgatgccc tacgtgctgt 1560
tcgtggtggc gtactcgctg tgcttccgcg cgcgcgcccc gcccccttcg cccccgcccg 1620
cgcccgcgcc cgcgcccgcg cccgcaccct cccgccgcag cgcgcgcgca cgcacacaag 1680
cacacccacc tagcccgctc tagcgaactc accccattca ttatcgtgac atattatatt 1740
atcgtgtatt ttaatcgacg tcttcctcgt ggcagcgtta ttcccactca gtattcgatg 1800
gcgttagtgt aattagtaaa gctcaagtgt ctatttgtat atatatgtga cccccgtgcc 1860
agtttagacc aagcctccgt ttttaaattg aagcagttcg agaaaaacgg taaaaataga 1920
ctcaattttg attggtcatc taaacagcag aacttttatt cggcacttat aaagtcctca 1980
attatttgtg tacaaaaata aatattttac tttccgagaa ttaaaaattt tcgataattt 2040
taccaatgat atgactcctt gtatggattc gtatgtaatg taaacctagg ttaagatata 2100
agaggaatcc cagaggttcc cgcatattac tttagccttt aaagtaaggt aaataaggac 2160
tagaatggca ctaatgtgta gtggaagtgg ggtattattt agtagttttc actctacagt 2220
acgtgaactg gactagatct actagcaaat agagttgatc aattttcatg tcgaaatgtt 2280
cacagatatt gtataaaccg ctggaggtaa acagctatca acaatgtaac accaaatacc 2340
atcagaatca agcaaaacca tggaaatttt gctaatcgaa aagttgtaac tgtttatcta 2400
tggcaggtat aattggccta gtaatgtatc gtgtagtatc atttacaaca catattaact 2460
attaaccaca ttatgtgaaa gaaggaattt ataaaaaaaa ccttattaaa tatatattag 2520
ataagtatta ttaattggat attctcttgc tggggatttt aatatgaatc ttacctttaa 2580
ataagtttga tctcactaga cgttgcaaat ggatacccca aatacctttt ccgcattaaa 2640
aggtattatt ttaacaaatg tattcttccc cgtcaatgtt ttaagactac gtatctacat 2700
aaaatgatgt attgttcata caatactatt tcaaaatgca agaacaacgt aaagtgcatt 2760
tcattgatgt ttgtgtatgt agatgacatt agtattttac ccaaaaatac tgatattaaa 2820
attcccagta agattcgtag gtaaatggta aacgtgtaaa tagttgggcc tacaactttc 2880
tacacctgtg tcgctcagtg tacagttacc tatatttaat attacaatta tatcattatt 2940
aacgaatgat aagattttat taacattaat ttctctgtct gaacgtatca ctgtaaatat 3000
tactaaatgt ttcctaatta cattattcat acatatatta tcatcccttg agctatagtt 3060
gcaaagtatt ccaaaaccac aatgaaaata aaatttcaat ttacttcacg atcaccaaat 3120
tgtgaaaacc tggttgttct gaattcattt aacaattagt ttttactttg aatccatggc 3180
tcaagggaca tcctaaggat attcattgaa atctatttag aatctcgtgt atgtatcatg 3240
acaccttcaa ataaaatatc actaatgctg tgttcggcta ttagatacaa taagtcgtac 3300
atattaacgt aagcacattc gtttttatta tgcggcggag agaacgcatc tgtttctata 3360
acgaaagggt ggccattatc ggctatatca tcttgcttgg tctgtataaa aataagagtc 3420
aaagactcgg gggaaacccc tatatgtata ctatcataac cgttatcctt attttgacaa 3480
agctctggga aacgaaatag cattttgttt caattacaca attcttgctc atttttctct 3540
tccgcctttt atttgaattt aggtgttgcc cactgtgcgc aatactctaa tggcttagaa 3600
ttatccttaa tatatattct cgggctgtga cgaggtgtag catctgcatt attatattaa 3660
tgtcatttcg tttgccattc gttgtatgta aggaaatatt agcctatgtc caacgctcaa 3720
aatctcatag acgtattagg cacacataag tgtacctttt cgtatgtatg taaattattg 3780
gagactcaat gtcttagttg gtgctatata tactacgatc cgaggagaat gtacccagta 3840
gtttactcat acataacgcc actgatatct tgtggaggaa atattatctg cgagacaagt 3900
agacattagt taagtttaca tatttacaat aaatgtttcc attattagga tataacatat 3960
gaatgtgtta ctgttgaaag cagcttctca aggtaccacc agtaattcgg agatacttgt 4020
aggatttgca ttcgataaac aacttatact aaaacgaaga tttgactgaa tctaaaccgc 4080
aaatactgtg gtcaaaatta ttaaacactt tcaatacatg ttgtacgcat gtttctgtaa 4140
tttcacattt aattgtaaag tcaattaaat cactgtataa taatacattt tcaacatatc 4200
tctcactgtt aagatttcgg ttggtccaac gacagaatca aatcgcaacg taatgatgat 4260
ccgggcaaaa ctaacaacta gatagatctc ttaaatgatt acgttgaagt ggaagaggtg 4320
atgtatgaag gaaggtagga ttaagtaaca ctgtataata tattgaccat aattacgatt 4380
ttagaagtca taatggacgg tttacctctt aagattatac agtaaaggta gatagtttca 4440
ttcgtaagct atgttgtact cgattggtat gacataacta atgactgagc tttgtcatct 4500
actacaaccc gagggcgaat acctccttct tctaccattc ccatttaatt ataaagaaac 4560
attgtaaaaa atgatttaat aaaatatccc aaatatctta aaacaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaa 4620
a 4621




14


450


PRT


Heliothis virescens



14
Ser Glu Gln Ile Asp Asn Met Asp Ile Pro Arg Pro Ser Cys Ala Leu
1 5 10 15
Val Leu Leu Phe Val Thr His Leu Ser Glu Cys Met Asn Gly Gly Lys
20 25 30
Ile Asn Phe Arg Glu Lys Glu Lys Gln Ile Leu Asp Gln Ile Leu Gly
35 40 45
Pro Gly Arg Tyr Asp Ala Arg Ile Arg Pro Ser Gly Ile Asn Gly Thr
50 55 60
Asp Gly Pro Ala Val Val Ser Val Asn Ile Phe Val Arg Ser Ile Ser
65 70 75 80
Lys Ile Asp Asp Val Thr Met Glu Tyr Ser Val Gln Leu Thr Phe Arg
85 90 95
Glu Gln Trp Leu Asp Glu Arg Leu Lys Phe Asn Asn Leu Gly Gly Arg
100 105 110
Leu Lys Tyr Leu Thr Leu Thr Glu Ala Asn Arg Val Trp Met Pro Asp
115 120 125
Leu Phe Phe Ser Asn Glu Lys Glu Gly His Phe His Asn Ile Ile Met
130 135 140
Pro Asn Val Tyr Ile Arg Ile Phe Pro Asn Gly Asn Val Leu Tyr Ser
145 150 155 160
Ile Arg Ile Ser Leu Thr Leu Ser Cys Pro Met Asn Leu Lys Leu Tyr
165 170 175
Pro Leu Asp Lys Gln Thr Cys Ser Leu Arg Met Ala Ser Tyr Gly Trp
180 185 190
Thr Thr Asp Asp Leu Val Phe Leu Trp Lys Glu Gly Asp Pro Val Gln
195 200 205
Val Val Lys Asn Leu His Leu Pro Arg Phe Thr Leu Glu Lys Phe Leu
210 215 220
Thr Asp Tyr Cys Asn Ser Lys Thr Asn Thr Gly Glu Tyr Ser Cys Leu
225 230 235 240
Lys Val Asp Leu Leu Phe Lys Arg Glu Phe Ser Tyr Tyr Leu Ile Gln
245 250 255
Ile Tyr Ile Pro Cys Cys Met Leu Val Ile Val Ser Trp Val Ser Phe
260 265 270
Trp Leu Asp Gln Gly Ala Val Pro Ala Arg Val Leu Leu Gly Val Thr
275 280 285
Thr Leu Leu Thr Met Ala Thr Gln Ser Ser Gly Ile Asn Ala Ser Leu
290 295 300
Pro Pro Val Ser Tyr Thr Lys Ala Ile Asp Val Trp Thr Gly Val Cys
305 310 315 320
Leu Thr Phe Val Phe Gly Ala Leu Leu Glu Ser Arg Phe Val Asn Tyr
325 330 335
Ala Ser Arg Ser Asp Met His Arg Glu Asn Met Lys Lys Ala Arg Arg
340 345 350
Glu Met Glu Ala Ala Ser Met Asp Ala Ala Ser Asp Leu Leu Asp Thr
355 360 365
Asp Ser Asn Thr Thr Phe Ala Met Lys Pro Leu Val Arg Gly Gly Val
370 375 380
Val Glu Ser Lys Met Arg Gln Cys Glu Ile His Ile Thr Pro Pro Arg
385 390 395 400
Lys Asn Cys Cys Arg Leu Trp Met Ser Lys Phe Pro Thr Arg Ser Lys
405 410 415
Arg Ile Asp Val Ile Ser Arg Ile Thr Phe Pro Leu Val Phe Ala Leu
420 425 430
Phe Asn Leu Ala Tyr Trp Ser Thr Tyr Leu Phe Arg Asp Glu Asp Glu
435 440 445
Glu Lys
450






Claims
  • 1. A method of identifying an agent that modulates the activity of a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel, said channel having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:14, and said channel being expressed in a host cell, a membrane preparation or an amphibian oocyte, said method comprising:(a) applying glutamate to the host cell, membrane preparation or amphibian oocyte expressing said lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel in the presence of chloride ions and measuring chloride flux; and (b) applying said agent and glutamate to a lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel in the presence of chloride ions and measuring chloride flux; (c) wherein a change in chloride flux in the presence of said agent is an indication that said agent modulates the activity of said lepidopteran glutamate-gated chloride channel.
SPECIFICATION

This is a divisional of application Ser. No. 09/592,891 filed Jun. 13, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,329,174.

US Referenced Citations (2)
Number Name Date Kind
5527703 Cully et al. Jun 1996 A
5693492 Cully et al. Dec 1997 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
9849185 May 1998 WO
9907828 Feb 1999 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (10)
Entry
Arena et al. (1991) “Avermectin-Sensitive Chloride Currents Induced by Caenorhabditis Elegans RNA in Xenopus Oocytes,” Molecular Pharm. 40:368.
Arena et al. (1992) “Expression of a Glutamate-Activated Chloride Current in Xenopus Oocytes Injected with Caenorhabditis Elegans RNA: Evidence for Modulation by Avermectin,” Molecular-Brain Research 15:339.
Cully et al. (1994) “Cloning of an Avermectin-Sensitive Glutamate-Gated Cholride Channel from Caenorhabditis Elegans,” Nature 371:707.
Cully et al. (1996) “Identification of a Drosophila Melanogaster Glutamate-Gated Chloride Channel Sensitive to the Antiparasitic Agent Avermectin,” J. Biol. Chem. 271:20187.
Delany et al. (1998) “Cloning and Localisation of an Avermectin Receptor-Related Subunit from Haemonchus Contortus,” Mol. Biochem. Parasit., 97:177.
Mikayama et al. (1993) “molecular Cloning and Functional Expression of a cDNA Encoding Glycosylation-Inhibitin Factor,” Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90:10056.
Voet et al. (1990) Biochemistry, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 126-128 and 228-234.
Smith MH, Warren VA, Thomas BS, Brochu RM, Ertel EA, Rohrer S, Schaeffer J, Schmatz D, Petuch BR, Tang YS, Meinke PT, Kaczorowski GJ, Cohen CJ. Nodulisporic acid opens insect glutamate-gated chloride channels: identification of a new high affinity modulator. Biochemistry 2000;39:5543-5554.
Pomes A, Kempner E, Rohrer S. Target size analysis of an avermectin binding site from Drosophila melanogaster. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1997;1339:233-238.
Yu SJ, Nguyen SN. Insecticide susceptibility and detoxification enzyme activities in permethrin-selected diamondback moths. Peticide Biochemistry and Physiology 1996;56:69-77.