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1.
2.
Binding of the Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1Ac toxin to specific receptors in the midgut brush border membrane is required for toxicity. Alteration of these receptors is the most reported mechanism of resistance. We used a proteomic approach to identify Cry1Ac binding proteins from intestinal brush border membrane (BBM) prepared from Heliothis virescens larvae. Cry1Ac binding BBM proteins were detected in 2D blots and identified using peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) or de novo sequencing. Among other proteins, the membrane bound alkaline phosphatase (HvALP), and a novel phosphatase, were identified as Cry1Ac binding proteins. Reduction of HvALP expression levels correlated directly with resistance to Cry1Ac in the YHD2-B strain of H. virescens. To study additional proteomic alterations in resistant H. virescens larvae, we used two-dimensional differential in-gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) to compare three independent resistant strains with a susceptible strain. Our results validate the use of proteomic approaches to identify toxin binding proteins and proteome alterations in resistant insects.  相似文献   

3.
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), a Gram-positive bacte-rium, produces insecticidal crystal proteins during sporulation. Bt has been used as biopesticides to con-trol a number of insect pests from Lepidoptera, Dip-tera and Hymenoptera and also has become so far the leading gene sources of transgenic plants resistant toinsect pests[1,2]. In China, the use of Bt cotton began in 1997 in Hebei, Shandong and Henan provinces, etc. and rapidly increased to more than 2 million ha in 2002, which is effe…  相似文献   

4.
Jurat-Fuentes JL  Adang MJ 《Biochemistry》2006,45(32):9688-9695
Genetic knockout of the BtR4 gene encoding the Heliothis virescens cadherin-like protein (HevCaLP) is linked to resistance against Cry1Ac toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis. However, the functional Cry1Ac receptor role of this protein has not been established. We previously proposed HevCaLP as a shared binding site for B. thuringiensis (Bt) Cry1A and Cry1Fa toxins in the midgut epithelium of H. virescens larvae. Considering that Cry1Ac and Cry1Fa are coexpressed in second-generation transgenic cotton for enhanced control of Heliothine and Spodoptera species, our model suggests the possibility of evolution of cross resistance via alteration of HevCaLP. To test whether HevCaLP is a Cry1Ac and Cry1Fa receptor, HevCaLP was transiently expressed on the surface of Drosophila melanogaster Schneider 2 (S2) cells. Expressed HevCaLP bound [(125)I]Cry1A toxins under native (dot blot) and denaturing (ligand blot) conditions. Affinity pull-down assays demonstrated that Cry1Fa does not bind to HevCaLP expressed in S2 cells or in solubilized brush border membrane proteins. Using a fluorescence-based approach, we tested the ability of expressed HevCaLP to mediate toxicity of Cry1A and Cry1Fa toxins. Cry1A toxins killed S2 cells expressing HevCaLP, whereas Cry1Fa toxin did not. Our results demonstrate that HevCaLP is a functional Cry1A but not Cry1Fa receptor.  相似文献   

5.
Proteins such as aminopeptidases and alkaline phosphatases, both glycosyl-phosphatidyl-inositol (GPI) anchored proteins, were previously identified as Cry1Ac binding proteins in the Heliothis virescens midgut. To identify additional toxin binding proteins, brush border membrane vesicles from H. virescens larvae were treated with phosphatidyl inositol phospholipase C, and released proteins were resolved by two-dimensional electrophoresis. Protein spots selected by their ability to bind Cry1Ac were identified by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry coupled to peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) and database searching. As in previous studies, H. virescens alkaline phosphatase was identified as a Cry1Ac binding protein. V-ATP synthase subunit A and actin were identified as novel Cry1Ac binding proteins in H. virescens. Additional toxin-binding proteins were predicted based on MS/MS fragmentation and de novo sequencing, providing amino acid sequences that were used in database searches to identify a phosphatase and a putative protein of the cadherin superfamily as additional Cry1Ac binding proteins.  相似文献   

6.
类钙粘蛋白(cadherin-likeprotein)位于昆虫中肠刷状缘膜囊泡(brushbordermembranevesicles,BBMV)上,是苏云金芽孢杆菌(Bacillusthuringiensis,Bt)产生的杀虫晶体蛋白(BtCry蛋白)的主要受体之一。它能够与BtCry蛋白结合,引起细胞膜的渗透性发生改变,促进BtCry蛋白对敏感昆虫的毒杀作用。类钙粘蛋白基因的突变还能导致敏感昆虫对BtCry蛋白产生抗性。因此,研究昆虫类钙粘蛋白与BtCry蛋白之间的相互作用,将有助于揭示BtCry蛋白杀虫作用机理。文章对昆虫类钙粘蛋白种类、结构特征、在昆虫体内的分布、及其与BtCry蛋白之间的相互作用等方面的研究现状进行详细论述。  相似文献   

7.
A cadherin-like protein has been identified as a putative receptor for Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) Cry1Ac toxin in Helicoverpa armigera and plays a key role in Bt insecticidal action. In this study, we produced a fragment from this H. armigera Cry1Ac toxin-binding cadherin that included the predicted toxin-binding region. Binding of Cry1Ac toxin to this cadherin fragment facilitated the formation of a 250-kDa toxin oligomer. The cadherin fragment was evaluated for its effect on Cry1Ac toxin-binding and toxicity by ligand blotting, binding assays, and bioassays. The results of ligand blotting and binding assays revealed that the binding of Cry1Ac to H. armigera midgut epithelial cells was reduced under denaturing or native conditions in vitro. Bioassay results indicated that toxicities from Cry1Ac protoxin or activated toxin were reduced in vivo by the H. armigera cadherin fragment. The addition of the cadherin fragment had no effect on Cry2Ab toxicity.  相似文献   

8.
Disruption of the Ha_BtR (a cadherin gene) is genetically linked to resistance to Cry1Ac delta-endotoxin of Bacillus thuringiensis in the GYBT strain of Helicoverpa armigera. Brush border membrane vesicles (BBMVs) prepared from midguts of both the Cry1Ac-resistant GYBT strain (homozygous for a deletion knockout of Ha_BtR) and the susceptible GY strain (homozygous for the wild type of Ha_BtR) possessed saturable and specific binding ability to (125)I-Cry1Ac. The binding constant (K(d)) of the GY strain was significantly lower than that of the resistant GYBT strain, whereas their binding site concentrations (B(max)) were similar. When midgut BBMVs were reacted directly with streptavidin conjugated to horseradish peroxidase, the GY strain had very clear 120- and 85-kDa protein bands, which indicated that the 120- and 85-kDa bands are endogenous biotin-containing proteins. However, the GYBT strain almost completely lost these two biotin-containing proteins. Ligand blotting with biotinylated Cry1Ac toxin showed midgut BBMVs of the GY strain contain five protein bands of 210-, 190-, 150-, 120-, and 85-kDa, respectively, while BBMVs of the GYBT strain contain only two protein bands of 150- and 120-kDa. 120-kDa bands may consist of two proteins with coincidentally the same molecular weight (putatively, an APN and a biotin-containing protein). Our results showed that the binding pattern of Cry1Ac to midgut BBMVs of H. armigera was altered quantitatively and qualitatively by knockout of Ha_BtR. There are multiple Cry1Ac-binding proteins in the midgut of susceptible H. armigera, but only the Ha_BtR can be considered as a putative functional receptor of Cry1Ac. Possible involvement of other receptor proteins in the intoxication process in vivo could not be excluded.  相似文献   

9.
Tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, is a model insect for studying the action of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) Cry toxins on lepidopterans. The proteins, which bind Bt toxins to midgut epithelial cells, are key factors involved in the insecticidal functions of the toxins. Three Cry1A-binding proteins, viz., aminopeptidase N (APN), the cadherin-like Bt-R1, and membrane-type alkaline phosphatase (m-ALP), were localized, by immunohistochemistry, in sections from the anterior, middle, and posterior regions of the midgut from second instar M. sexta larvae. Both APN and m-ALP were distributed predominantly along microvilli in the posterior region and to a lesser extent on the apical tip of microvilli in the anterior and middle regions. Bt-R1 was localized at the base of microvilli in the anterior region, over the entire microvilli in the middle region, and at both the apex and base of microvilli in the posterior region. The localization of rhodamine-labeled Cry1Aa, Cry1Ab, and Cry1Ac binding was determined on sections from the same midgut regions. Cry1Aa and Cry1Ab bound to the apical tip of microvilli almost equally in all midgut regions. Binding of Cry1Ac was much stronger in the posterior region than in the anterior and middle regions. Thus, binding sites for Bt proteins and Cry1A toxins are co-localized on the microvilli of M. sexta midgut epithelial cells.  相似文献   

10.
The binding properties of Vip3A, a new family of Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal toxins, have been examined in the major cotton pests, Heliothis virescens and Helicoverpa zea. Vip3A bound specifically to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) prepared from both insect larval midguts. In order to examine the cross-resistance potential of Vip3A to the commercially available Cry1Ac and Cry2Ab2 toxins, the membrane binding site relationship among these toxins was investigated. Competition binding assays demonstrated that Vip3A does not inhibit the binding of either Cry1Ac or Cry2Ab2 and vice versa. BBMV protein blotting experiments showed that Vip3A does not bind to the known Cry1Ac receptors. These distinct binding properties and the unique protein sequence of Vip3A support its use as a novel insecticidal agent. This study indicates a very low cross-resistance potential between Vip3A and currently deployed Cry toxins and hence supports its use in an effective resistance management strategy in cotton.  相似文献   

11.
We reported previously a direct correlation between reduced soybean agglutinin binding to 63- and 68-kDa midgut glycoproteins and resistance to Cry1Ac toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis in the tobacco budworm (Heliothis virescens). In the present work we describe the identification of the 68-kDa glycoprotein as a membrane-bound form of alkaline phosphatase we term HvALP. Lectin blot analysis of HvALP revealed the existence of N-linked oligosaccharides containing terminal N-acetylgalactosamine required for [125I]Cry1Ac binding in ligand blots. Based on immunoblotting and alkaline phosphatase activity detection, reduced soybean agglutinin binding to HvALP from Cry1Ac resistant larvae of the H. virescens YHD2 strain was attributable to reduced amounts of HvALP in resistant larvae. Quantification of specific alkaline phosphatase activity in brush border membrane proteins from susceptible (YDK and F1 generation from backcrosses) and YHD2 H. virescens larvae confirmed the observation of reduced HvALP levels. We propose HvALP as a Cry1Ac binding protein that is present at reduced levels in brush border membrane vesicles from YHD2 larvae.  相似文献   

12.
Retrotransposon-mediated disruption of the BtR-4 gene encoding the Heliothis virescens cadherin-like protein (HevCaLP) is linked to high levels of resistance in the YHD2 strain to Cry1Ac toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis. This suggests that HevCaLP functions as a Cry1Ac toxin receptor on the surface of midgut cells in susceptible larvae and that the BtR-4 gene disruption eliminates this protein in resistant larvae. However, Cry1Ac toxin binding to HevCaLP is yet to be reported. We used the polymerase chain reaction and immunoblotting as tools to discriminate between individual H. virescens larval midguts from susceptible (YDK) and resistant (CXC, KCBhyb, and YHD2-B) strains according to their BtR-4 gene disruption genotype and phenotype. This approach allowed us to test the correlation between BtR-4 gene disruption, lack of HevCaLP, and altered Cry1A toxin binding. Toxin-binding assays using brush border membrane vesicles revealed that a wild-type BtR-4 allele is necessary for HevCaLP production and Cry1Aa toxin binding, while most of Cry1Ab and Cry1Ac binding was independent of the BtR-4 genotype. Moreover, toxin competition experiments show that KCBhyb midguts lacking HevCaLP are more similar to midguts of the original YHD2 strain than to the current YHD2-B strain. This resolves discrepancies in published studies of Cry1A binding in YHD2 and supports our earlier suggestion that a separate genetic change occurred in YHD2 after appearance of the cadherin disruption, conferring even higher resistance in the resulting YHD2-B strain as well as a large reduction in Cry1Ab and Cry1Ac binding.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The diversity of Bt resistance genes in species of Lepidoptera   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Although the mode of action of Cry1A toxins produced by Bacillus thuringiensis is fairly well understood, knowledge of the molecular mechanisms by which lepidopteran species have evolved resistance to them is still in its infancy. The most common type of resistance has been called "Mode 1" and is characterized by recessive inheritance, >500-fold resistance to and reduced binding by at least one Cry1A toxin, and negligible cross-resistance to Cry1C. In three lepidopteran species, Heliothis virescens, Pectinophora gossypiella, and Helicoverpa armigera, Mode 1 resistance is caused by mutations in a toxin-binding 12-cadherin-domain protein expressed in the larval midgut. These mutations all interrupt the primary sequence of the protein and prevent its normal localization in the membrane, presumably removing a major toxic binding target of the Cry1A toxins. In Plutella xylostella, however, Mode 1 resistance appears to be caused by a different genetic mechanism, as Cry1A resistance is unlinked to the cadherin gene. Mapping studies in H. virescens have detected an additional major Cry1A resistance gene, which on the basis of comparative linkage mapping is distinct from the one in P. xylostella. An additional resistance mechanism supported by genetic data involves a protoxin-processing protease in Plodia interpunctella, and this is likely to be different from the genes mapped in Plutella and Heliothis. Thus, resistance to Cry1A toxins in species of Lepidoptera has a complex genetic basis, with at least four distinct, major resistance genes of which three are mapped in one or more species. The connection between resistance genes and the mechanisms they encode remains a challenging task to elucidate.  相似文献   

15.
Although extensively studied, the mechanism of action of insecticidal Bacillus thuringiensis Cry toxins remains elusive and requires further elucidation. Toxin receptors in the brush border membrane demand particular attention as they presumably initiate the cascade of events leading to insect mortality after toxin activation. The 170-kDa Cry1Ac toxin-binding aminopeptidase from the tobacco budworm (Heliothis virescens) was partially purified, and its corresponding cDNA was cloned. The cDNA encodes a protein with a putative glycosyl phosphatidylinositol anchor and a polythreonine stretch clustered near the C terminus with predicted O-glycosylation. Partial purification of the 170-kDa aminopeptidase also resulted in isolation of a 130-kDa protein that was immunologically identical to the 170-kDa protein, and the two proteins had identical N termini. These proteins were glycosylated, as suggested by soybean agglutinin lectin blot results. Cry1Ac toxin affinity data for the two proteins indicated that the 130-kDa protein had a higher affinity than the 170-kDa protein. The data suggest that posttranslational modifications can have a significant effect on Cry1A toxin interactions with specific insect midgut proteins.  相似文献   

16.
We constructed a model for Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1 toxin binding to midgut membrane vesicles from Heliothis virescens. Brush border membrane vesicle binding assays were performed with five Cry1 toxins that share homologies in domain II loops. Cry1Ab, Cry1Ac, Cry1Ja, and Cry1Fa competed with (125)I-Cry1Aa, evidence that each toxin binds to the Cry1Aa binding site in H. virescens. Cry1Ac competed with high affinity (competition constant [K(com)] = 1.1 nM) for (125)I-Cry1Ab binding sites. Cry1Aa, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja also competed for (125)I-Cry1Ab binding sites, though the K(com) values ranged from 179 to 304 nM. Cry1Ab competed for (125)I-Cry1Ac binding sites (K(com) = 73.6 nM) with higher affinity than Cry1Aa, Cry1Fa, or Cry1Ja. Neither Cry1Ea nor Cry2Aa competed with any of the (125)I-Cry1A toxins. Ligand blots prepared from membrane vesicles were probed with Cry1 toxins to expand the model of Cry1 receptors in H. virescens. Three Cry1A toxins, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja recognized 170- and 110-kDa proteins that are probably aminopeptidases. Cry1Ab and Cry1Ac, and to some extent Cry1Fa, also recognized a 130-kDa molecule. Our vesicle binding and ligand blotting results support a determinant role for domain II loops in Cry toxin specificity for H. virescens. The shared binding properties for these Cry1 toxins correlate with observed cross-resistance in H. virescens.  相似文献   

17.
Bacillus thuringiensis Cry protein exerts its toxic effect through a receptor-mediated process. Both aminopeptidases and cadherin proteins were identified as putative Cry1A receptors from Heliothis virescens and Manduca sexta. The importance of cadherin was implied by its correlation with a Cry1Ac resistant H. virescens strain (Gahan, L. J., Gould, F., and Heckel, D. G. (2001) Science 293, 857-860). In this study, the Cry1Ac toxin-binding region in H. virescens cadherin was mapped to a 40-amino-acid fragment, from amino acids 1422 to 1440. This site overlaps with a Cry1Ab toxin-binding site, amino acids 1363-1464 recently reported in M. sexta (Hua, G., Jurat-Fuentes, J. L., and Adang, M. J. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 28051-28056). Further, feeding of the anti-H. virescens cadherin antiserum or the partial cadherins, which contain the toxin-binding region, in combination with Cry1Ab/Cry1Ac reduced insect mortality by 25.5-55.6% to first instar H. virescens and M. sexta larvae, suggesting a critical function for this cadherin domain in insect toxicity. Mutations in this region, to which the Cry1Ac binds through its loop 3, resulted in the loss of toxin binding. For the first time, we show that the cadherin amino acids Leu(1425) and Phe(1429) are critical for Cry1Ac toxin interaction, and if substituted with charged amino acids, result in the loss of toxin binding, with a K(D) of < 10(-5) m. Mutation of Gln(1430) to an alanine, however, increased the Cry1Ac affinity 10-fold primarily due to an increase on rate. The L1425R mutant can result from a single nucleotide mutation, CTG --> CGG, suggesting that these mutants, which have decreased toxin binding, may lead to Cry1A resistance in insects.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of Cry toxins from Bacillus thuringiensis in the midgut of some insect larvae determines their efficacies as insecticides, due to the expression and availability of sites of action of the toxin in the midgut. Researches point out cases of resistance to Cry toxin due to alterations in the binding sites in columnar cell membrane. We analyzed the effects of Cry1Ac toxin expressed by Bt-cotton plants on Alabama argillacea midgut morphophysiology clarifying in levels of morphological and ultrastructural. Larvae in the 4th instar of A. argillacea after 20 min from ingesting Bt-cotton leaves expressing 0.183 ng of Cry1Ac exhibited ultrastructural and morphological modifications in the columnar cells with significant changes in the mitochondrial polymorphism, cytoplasmic vacuolization, microvillus and basal labyrinth. Expressive morphological alterations were also observed in the goblet cells indicating that the columnar cells are not the only target of the Cry1Ac toxin. The regenerative cells did not modify their structures and exhibited decrease in regeneration capacity. In conclusion, the ingestion of 0.183 ± 0.077 ng of Cry1Ac was enough to promote alterations in the columnar and goblet cells, besides reducing significantly the number of regenerative cells, which may have contributed to larval death. Nevertheless, further studies are necessary to determine the true cause of death.  相似文献   

19.
Bacillus thuringiensis produces insecticidal crystal (Cry) proteins which bind to cell surface receptors on the brush border membrane of susceptible midgut larvae. The toxin-receptor interaction generates pores in midgut epithelial cells resulting in cell lysis. Here, a cDNA encoding membrane-bound alkaline phosphatase from Aedes aegypti (Aa-mALP) midgut larvae, based on the sequence identity hit to Bombyx mori membrane-bound ALP, was amplified by RT-PCR and transiently expressed in Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) insect cells as a 58-kDa membrane-bound protein via the baculovirus expression system and confirmed by digestion with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C and LC-MS/MS analysis. Immunolocalization results showed that Cry4Ba is able to bind to only Sf9 cells-expressing Aa-mALP. Moreover, these cells were shown to undergo cell lysis in the presence of 100 ??g/ml trypsin-treated toxin. Finally, trypan blue exclusion assay also demonstrated an increase in cell death in recombinant cells treated with Cry4Ba. Overall results indicated that Aa-mALP protein was responsible for mediating Cry4Ba toxicity against Sf9 cells, suggesting its role as a receptor for Cry4Ba toxin in A. aegypti mosquito larvae.  相似文献   

20.
One strategy for delaying evolution of resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis crystal (Cry) endotoxins is the production of multiple Cry toxins in each transgenic plant (gene stacking). This strategy relies upon the assumption that simultaneous evolution of resistance to toxins that have different modes of action will be difficult for insect pests. In B. thuringiensis-transgenic (Bt) cotton, production of both Cry1Ac and Cry2Ab has been proposed to delay resistance of Heliothis virescens (tobacco budworm). After previous laboratory selection with Cry1Ac, H. virescens strains CXC and KCBhyb developed high levels of cross-resistance not only to toxins similar to Cry1Ac but also to Cry2Aa. We studied the role of toxin binding alteration in resistance and cross-resistance with the CXC and KCBhyb strains. In toxin binding experiments, Cry1A and Cry2Aa toxins bound to brush border membrane vesicles from CXC, but binding of Cry1Aa was reduced for the KCBhyb strain compared to susceptible insects. Since Cry1Aa and Cry2Aa do not share binding proteins in H. virescens, our results suggest occurrence of at least two mechanisms of resistance in KCBhyb insects, one of them related to reduction of Cry1Aa toxin binding. Cry1Ac bound irreversibly to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) from YDK, CXC, and KCBhyb larvae, suggesting that Cry1Ac insertion was unaffected. These results highlight the genetic potential of H. virescens to become resistant to distinct Cry toxins simultaneously and may question the effectiveness of gene stacking in delaying evolution of resistance.  相似文献   

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