In
rhesus macaque (
Macaca mulatta) and
olive baboon (
Papio anubis), θ-defensins are produced from precursor proteins with 76
amino acids each. A single nine amino acid
peptide is derived from each precursor. Two of these nine amino acid peptides are spliced together to form the circular 18 amino acid defensin. Since there are two precursor genes (rhesus theta defensin RTD-1 and RTD-2) they can form 3 different mature θ-defensins: the homodimer of processed RTD-1, The homodimer of processed RTD-2 or the heterodimer composed of both precursors. The heterodimeric form is the most abundant. In the olive baboon, four θ-defensin precursor genes have been isolated: BTD-a, BTD-b, BTD-c and BTD-d, which encode
subunits A, B, C and D. These four subunits could theoretically combine to produce 10 different processed defensins. However, only five have been observed: consisting of subunits A+A, A+B, A+C, A+D and B+B (Referred to as BTD-3, BTD-1, BTD-4, BTD7 and BTD-2 respectively). Finally, orangutan genomes encode 4 θ-defensin precursor genes and gibbon genomes encode 2. == Activity ==