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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Nov 6.
Published in final edited form as: J Invest Dermatol. 2014 Aug 7;135(1):102–109. doi: 10.1038/jid.2014.271

Table 1. Amino acid sequence identity of Der p 11 with paramyosins from invertebrates1.

D. pteronyssinus D. farinae S. scabiei B. tropicalis I. scapularis P. humanus
corporis
A. mellifera B. mori A. gambiae D. melanogaster T. spiralis A. simplex A. suum S. japonicum
D. pteronyssinus 100 97 94 89 77 66 65 63 59 59 50 51 51 39
D. farinae 100 95 90 77 65 64 61 57 59 50 50 51 39
S. scabiei 100 88 78 64 63 61 57 57 48 49 50 37
B. tropicalis 100 78 64 63 61 57 58 48 49 49 37
I. scapularis 100 63 64 62 58 58 49 50 50 37
P. humanus corporis 100 82 80 72 73 49 49 50 37
A. mellifera 100 81 72 72 49 49 50 37
B. mori 100 73 71 48 48 48 35
A. gambiae 100 70 46 45 46 35
D. melanogaster 100 46 47 47 35
T. spiralis 100 78 78 37
A. simplex 100 95 37
A. suum 100 37
S. japonicum 100
1

Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus (AAO73464.1), Dermatophagoides farinae (Q967Z0), Sarcoptes scabiei (ACC65584.1), Blomia tropicalis (Q8MUF6), Ixodes scapularis (XP_002407289.1), Pediculus humanus corporis (XP_002432355.1), Apis mellifera (XP_393281.2), Bombyx mori (NP_001124374.1), Anopheles gambiae (XP_314309.4), Drosophila melanogaster (CAA41557.1), Trichinella spiralis (XP_003371652.1), Anisaki simplex (Q9NJA9.1), Ascaris suum (ADY40789.1), and Schistosoma japonicum (AAX26229.2).