Upon bacterial infection, insects secrete a set of synthesized antibacterial proteins into the hemolymph and initiate synergistic
destruction of invaders. Cecropin is one such antibacterial protein which is also found in vertebrates. To study the evolutionary
history and mechanism of the
Cecropin gene family, we determined DNA sequences of one isogenic
In(3R)C and six isofemale lines of
Drosophila melanogaster as well as one line of
D. simulans and of
D. yakuba. The phylogenetic analysis of these sequences together with those published for
D. virilis and
Sarcophaga peregrina reveals frequent gene re-organization. It was also found that silent nucleotide differences within
D. melanogaster are quite heterogeneous across the gene region of approximately 3 kilobases and the extent of polymorphism is unusually usually
high. These data suggest that the
Cecropin gene region of
D. melanogaster underwent intragenic recombination as well as introgression from a closely related sibling species,
D. simulans.
Key words Antibacterial peptides - Gene turnover - Introgression - Intragenic recombination
Received: 31 July 1997 / Revised: 24 October 1997