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1.
The expression of the modified gene for a truncated form of thecryIA(c) gene, encoding the insecticidal portion of the lepidopteran-active CryIA(c) protein fromBacillus thuringiensis var.kurstaki (B.t.k.) HD73, under control of theArabidopsis thaliana ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) small subunitats1A promoter with and without its associated transit peptide was analyzed in transgenic tobacco plants. Examination of leaf tissue revealed that theats1A promoter with its transit peptide sequence fused to the truncated CryIA(c) protein provided a 10-fold to 20-fold increase incryIA(c) mRNA and protein levels compared to gene constructs in which the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter with a duplication of the enhancer region (CaMV-En35S) was used to express the samecryIA(c) gene. Transient expression assays in tobacco protoplasts and the whole plant results support the conclusion that the transit peptide plus untranslated sequences upstream of that region are both required for the increase in expression of the CryIA(c) protein. Furthermore, the CaMV-En35S promoter can be used with theArabidopsis ats1A untranslated leader and transit peptide to increase expression of this protein. While subcellular fractionation revealed that the truncated CryIA(c) protein fused to theats1A transit peptide is located in the chloroplast, the increase in gene expression is independent of targeting of the CryIA(c) protein to the chloroplast. The results reported here provide new insight into the role of 5 untranslated leader sequences and translational fusions to increase heterologous gene expression, and they demonstrate the utility of this approach in the development of insect-resistant crops.  相似文献   

2.
To investigate the specificity of Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki strain HD1 insecticidal crystal proteins (ICP), we used membrane preparations obtained from the midgut of Heliothis virescens larvae to perform separate ligand-blot experiments with the three activated CryIA toxins. The CryIA(a) and the CryIA(b) toxins bind the same 170-kDa protein, but most likely at two different binding sites. The CryIA(c) toxin binds two proteins of molecular masses 140 kDa and 120 kDa. We also demonstrate that the binding proteins for each of the B. thuringiensis toxins are not part of a covalent complex. Although the 170-kDa protein is a glycoprotein, endoglycosidase treatment does not prevent the binding of the CryIA(a) or CryIA(b) toxin. This indicates that the sugars are not important for the binding of these toxins. A model for a protein complex binding the B. thuringiensis HD1 ICPs is presented. Our results support the idea that binding proteins on membranes of the gut epithelial cells of H. virescens larvea are important for the specificity of the bacterial toxins.  相似文献   

3.
Cotyledons cut from axenic seedlings were immersed inAgrobacterium tumefaciens suspension which was treated with acetosyringone and nopaline at low pH overnight. The infected cotyledon explants were cultured on MSB medium (MS salts + B5 Vitamins) containing 6-BA 3mg/1 for 2–3 days, and transferred onto selective medium (MSB with kanamycin 50–100 mg/l). Kanamycin-resistant shoots were selected. More than 60 regenerated plants were obtained. About 60% of the plants showed high NPT II activity. Southern blot hybridization showed that some of the plants gave a positive signal with the insecticidal crystal protein gene (cry IA gene) probe, and exhibited tolerant to insects such asPieris rapae (cabbage caterpillar) in leaf feeding experiments. Kanamycin-resistance and insect-resistance were maintained in the progeny.Abbreviations 6-BA 6-benzylaminopurine - IBA indole-3-butyric acid - CryIA gene bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal crystal protein genecryIA - NPT II neomycin phosphotransferase II  相似文献   

4.
Vegetative insecticidal protein (Vip) is a class of insecticidal proteins produced by many Bacillus thuringiensis strains during their vegetative growth stage. The vip3LB gene of B. thuringiensis strain BUPM95, which encodes a protein active against the Lepidoptera olive tree pathogenic insect Prays oleae, was cloned into pET-14b vector and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. The expressed Vip3LB protein, found in the E. coli cytoplasmic fraction, was purified and used to produce anti-Vip3LB antibodies. Using the midgut extract of P. oleae, the purified Vip3LB bound to a 65-kDa protein, whereas Cry1Ac toxin bound to a 210-kDa midgut putative receptor. This result justifies the importance of the biological pest control agent Vip3LB that could be used as another alternative particularly in case of resistance to Cry toxins.  相似文献   

5.
The susceptibility of Trichoplusia ni larvae to several Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal crystal proteins (ICPs) was tested. Neonatal larvae proved to be susceptible to solubilized trypsin-treated CryIA(a), CryIA(b), and CryIA(c) (50% lethal concentrations [LC50s], 570, 480, and 320 ng/cm2, respectively) but showed little susceptibility to CryIB and CryID (LC50s, 5,640 and 2,530 ng/cm2, respectively). The toxicity of ICPs was correlated to binding to the epithelial brush border of the midgut, as revealed by immunocytochemical staining with monoclonal antibodies. In vitro binding experiments with iodinated ICPs and brush border membrane vesicles indicated that CryIA(b) and CryIA(c) share the same high-affinity binding site, whereas CryIA(a) binds to a different one. The affinities of CryIA(b) and CryIA(c) for the binding site were similar (Kd = 3.6 and 4.7 nM, respectively), and the mean binding-site concentration was 0.71 pmol/mg of vesicle protein. Selection of a population with increasing concentrations of CryIA(b) produced 31-fold resistance in seven generations. The realized heritability (h2) was 0.19. The increase of homozygosity (for resistance factors) as selection proceeded was reflected in the increase in the slopes of the dose-mortality curves. Resistance was specific for CryIA(b) and did not extend to CryIA(a) or even to CryIA(c). This result was not predicted by the binding-site model, in which CryIA(b) and CryIA(c) bind to the same high-affinity binding site. This result may suggest a more complicated relationship between in vitro binding of ICPs to specific sites in the epithelial membrane of the midgut and the in vivo toxic effect.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Previous studies have shown that a 20-kDa protein enhances production of the insecticidal CytA and CryIVA proteins of Bacillus thuringiensis in Escherichia coli as well as CytA production and crystal formation in B. thuringiensis. To determine whether the 20-kDa protein could enhance CryIVD production, an expression vector was constructed with the 20-kDa open-reading frame under control of cryIA(c) promoters and the cryIVD gene under control of its own promoter. Acrystalliferous cells of B. thuringiensis transformed with this plasmid, designated pWF53, produced large bitrapezoidal CryIVD crystals that averaged 1.3 × 0.92 × 0.31 m, approximately fivefold larger in volume than wild-type CryIVD crystals, and 1.7 fold the volume of crystals produced using the cryIV D operon, which contains the cryIV D gene and the gene for the 20-kDa protein. These results demonstrate that the 20-kDa protein significantly improves net synthesis of CryIVD and promotes CryIVD crystal formation. Improved production of proteins as diverse as CryIVD and CytA by the 20-kDa protein indicates this protein may be useful in facilitating the production of other proteins.  相似文献   

8.
The insecticidal activity of the CryIA(a), CryIA(b), and CryIA(c) toxins from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki HD-1 was determined in force-feeding experiments with larvae of Choristoneura fumiferana, C. occidentalis, C. pinus, Lymantria dispar, Orgyia leucostigma, Malacosoma disstria, and Actebia fennica. The toxins were obtained from cloned protoxin genes expressed in Escherichia coli. The protoxins were activated with gut juice from Bombyx mori larvae. Biological activity of the individual gene products as well as the native HD-1 toxin was assessed as the dose which prevented 50% of the insects from producing frass within 3 days (frass failure dose [FFD50]). The three toxins were about equally active against M. disstria. In the Choristoneura species, CryIA(a) and CryIA(b) were up to fivefold more toxic than CryIA(c). In the lymantriid species, CryIA(a) and CryIA(b) were up to 100-fold more toxic than CryIA(c). The toxicity of HD-1 was similar to that of the individual CryIA(a) or CryIA(b) toxins in all of these species. None of the CryIA toxins or HD-1 exhibited and toxicity towards A. fennica. Comparison of the observed FFD50 of HD-1 with the FFD50 expected on the basis of its crystal composition suggested a possible synergistic effect of the toxins in the two lymantriid species. Our results further illustrate the diversity of activity spectra of these highly related proteins and provide a data base for studies with forest insects to elucidate the molecular basis of toxin specificity.  相似文献   

9.
To delineate the mosquitocidal regions of the ISRH3 (CryIVB) and ISRH4 (CryIVA) proteins, which are two of the mosquitocidal 130-kDa proteins contained in the crystalline protein bodies (CPBs) of Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis (BTI), a deletion analysis of these protein genes has been done. Based on the evidence that each 130-kDa protein had two mosquitocidal regions, N-terminal and C-terminal ones, and these two regions shared a common part in the center of the 130-kDa proteins, deleted genes on this region were constructed. As the protein products which lacked the central region had reduced activities, the central region could be important for the mosquitocidal activity. The mosquitocidal and non-mosquitocidal truncated gene products of 130-kDa protein genes were also applied to a cultured lepidopteran cell line, TN-368. The mosquitocidal proteins caused the swelling and disruption of the cells in spite of the insecticidal specificity of CPBs of BTI, but the non-mosquitocidal proteins did not. Therefore, TN-368 cells were sensitive to the mosquitocidal fragments of 130-kDa proteins of BTI under the assay conditions used.  相似文献   

10.
Expression of the insecticidal protein gene from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. aizawai IPL7 in B. subtilis MI113 and B. stearothermophilus SIC1 was examined. Production of the protein (130 kilodaltons [KDa]) was analyzed by its reaction with antibody against the insecticidal proteins of the parental B. thuringiensis. When the original gene containing its own promoter was subcloned in B. subtilis, only a small amount of the protein was produced. Therefore, both the promoter for the B. stearothermophilus alpha-amylase gene and the insecticidal protein gene were inserted in a repA (low-copy-number) plasmid to yield the recombinant plasmid pTBT-Pamy. B. subtilis MI113 carrying pTBT-Pamy produced more of the 130-kDa protein (about 10(4) molecules per cell) at 37 degrees C. In contrast, B. stearothermophilus SIC1 carrying pTBT-Pamy produced a small amount of 130-kDa protein (10(2) to 10(3) molecules per cell) at 55 degrees C.  相似文献   

11.
Expression of the insecticidal protein gene from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. aizawai IPL7 in B. subtilis MI113 and B. stearothermophilus SIC1 was examined. Production of the protein (130 kilodaltons [KDa]) was analyzed by its reaction with antibody against the insecticidal proteins of the parental B. thuringiensis. When the original gene containing its own promoter was subcloned in B. subtilis, only a small amount of the protein was produced. Therefore, both the promoter for the B. stearothermophilus alpha-amylase gene and the insecticidal protein gene were inserted in a repA (low-copy-number) plasmid to yield the recombinant plasmid pTBT-Pamy. B. subtilis MI113 carrying pTBT-Pamy produced more of the 130-kDa protein (about 10(4) molecules per cell) at 37 degrees C. In contrast, B. stearothermophilus SIC1 carrying pTBT-Pamy produced a small amount of 130-kDa protein (10(2) to 10(3) molecules per cell) at 55 degrees C.  相似文献   

12.
Tao K  Long Z  Liu K  Tao Y  Liu S 《Current microbiology》2006,52(1):45-49
One or more proteinaceous factors with insecticidal activities in the locust pathogen Serratia marcescens HR-3 culture filtrates were found to cause the death of grassland locusts. A novel insecticidal protein was purified to homogeneity. It was a monomer of 61 kDa. The purified protein showed a strong insecticidal effect with a median lethal dosage of 12.1 μg locust−1 and contained a high level of protease activity (101 U ml−1). Insecticidal activity was significantly decreased when the protein was pretreated with ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid and 1-10-phenanthroline, and it was restored when the treated protein was incubated with Zn2+. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of insecticidal protein showed sequence similarity with metalloprotease from S. marcescens SM6 and Serratia spp. E15. Our results suggested that the factor primarily responsible for insecticidal activity toward locusts was a zinc-dependent 61-kDa metalloprotease.  相似文献   

13.
Aminopeptidase-N (AP-N) was purified from gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar, L.) brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) proteins by mono-Q chromatography and Superdex-75 gel filtration in the presence of the zwitterionic detergent, CHAPS, using FPLC. The purified AP-N, identified by its enzymatic activity, had an apparent size of 100 kDa, and was identified as the unique Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal toxin, CryIA(c), binding protein. AP-N clearly displayed strong binding to CryIA(c), exhibiting little or no binding to CryIA(a) or CryIA(b), and showing no binding for the coleopteran-specific toxin, CryIIIA. Protein blots of the BBMV proteins probed with biotin-labeled and 125I-labeled insecticidal proteins revealed that CryIAc binds only to 120 kDa protein which is a slightly larger size in comparison to purified AP-N. Antibodies raised against the gypsy moth AP-N demonstrated that the purified AP-N and the 120 kDa CryIA(c) binding protein of total BBMV proteins are antigenically identical.  相似文献   

14.
A new cry gene (cry1Ca9) was cloned and sequenced from a Bacillus thuringiensis isolate native to Taiwan (G10-01A). The cry1C-type gene, designated cry1Ca9, consisted of an open reading frame of 3,567 bp, encoding a protein of 1,189 amino acid residues. The polypeptide has the deduced amino acid sequences predicting molecular masses of 134.7 kDa. The gene sequence was compared against the GenBank nucleotide sequence data base. It was found that the cry1Ca9 gene coded for a 134.7-kDa protoxin which had greater than 99.8% homology with the previously reported cry1Ca1 gene, as only three mismatches were found between the two amino acid sequences. When the Cry1Ca9 toxin was expressed in a crystal-negative strain of B. thuringiensis (cryB-), elliptical crystals were produced. Cell extracts from this recombinant strain appear to have high insecticidal activity against lepidopteran larvae (Plutella xylostella).Received: 23 September 2002 / Accepted: 6 December 2002  相似文献   

15.
Recent advances in genetic engineering have provided the opportunity to induce walnut plants to produce Bacillus thuringiensis Berliner insecticidal crystal protein fragments (ICPFs) for insect control. We studied the effects of two ICPFs CryIA(b) and CrylA(c) previously shown to be encoded by the cryIA(b) and cryIA(c) genes in the B. thuringiensis strains HD-1 and HD-73, respectively. The lethal effects on larvae of codling moth, Cydia pomonella (L.), navel orangeworm, Amyelois transitella (Walker), and the major postharvest pest Indianmeal moth, Plodia interpunctella (Hübner), were investigated. Both proteins were toxic to the three species tested. Indianmeal moth larvae were the most susceptible and navel orangeworm the least; CryIA(b) was generally more toxic to navel orangeworm. Similar relationships resulted when ICPFs were incorporated into the diet. Both ICPFs caused decreased rate of development of navel orangeworm. Effects on pupal weight occurred only at the highest concentration (100 ng/cm2). Neither ICPF affected frequency of mating or fecundity. In addition to the lethal effects, the extended development times observed could have considerable effects on the population dynamics of the navel orangeworm and possibly other species.  相似文献   

16.
A new family of insecticidal crystal proteins was discovered by screening sporulated Bacillus thuringiensis cultures for oral activity against western corn rootworm (WCR) larvae. B. thuringiensis isolates PS80JJ1, PS149B1, and PS167H2 have WCR insecticidal activity attributable to parasporal inclusion bodies containing proteins with molecular masses of ca. 14 and 44 kDa. The genes encoding these polypeptides reside in apparent operons, and the 14-kDa protein open reading frame (ORF) precedes the 44-kDa protein ORF. Mutagenesis of either gene in the apparent operons dramatically reduced insecticidal activity of the corresponding recombinant B. thuringiensis strain. Bioassays performed with separately expressed, biochemically purified 14- and 44-kDa polypeptides also demonstrated that both proteins are required for WCR mortality. Sequence comparisons with other known B. thuringiensis insecticidal proteins failed to reveal homology with previously described Cry, Cyt, or Vip proteins. However, there is evidence that the 44-kDa polypeptide and the 41.9- and 51.4-kDa binary dipteran insecticidal proteins from Bacillus sphaericus are evolutionarily related. The 14- and 44-kDa polypeptides from isolates PS80JJ1, PS149B1, and PS167H2 have been designated Cry34Aa1, Cry34Ab1, and Cry34Ac1, respectively, and the 44-kDa polypeptides from these isolates have been designated Cry35Aa1, Cry35Ab1, and Cry35Ac1, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
Receptor binding studies were performed with 125I-labeled trypsin-activated insecticidal toxins, CryIA(a) and CryIA(c), from Bacillus thuringiensis on brush-border membrane vesicles (BBMV) prepared from Bombyx mori larval midgut. Bioassays were performed by gently force feeding B. mori with diluted toxins. CryIA(a) toxin (LD50; 0.002 micrograms) was 200 times more active against B. mori larvae than CryIA(c) toxin (LD50; 0.421 micrograms) and showed high-affinity saturable binding. The Kd and the binding site concentration for CryIA(a) toxin were 3.5 nM and 7.95 pmol/mg, respectively. CryIA(c) toxin (Kd, 50.35 nM; Bmax, 2.85 pmol/mg) did not demonstrate high-affinity binding to B. mori BBMV. Control experiments with CryIA(a) and CryIA(c) toxins revealed no binding to mouse small intestine BBMV and nonspecific binding to pig kidney BBMV. These data provide evidence that binding to a specific receptor on the membrane of midgut epithelial cells is an important determinant with respect to differences in insecticidal spectrum of insecticidal crystal proteins. To locate a B. mori receptor binding region on the CryIA(a) toxin, homologous and heterologous competition binding studies were performed with a set of mutant proteins which had previously been used to define the B. mori "specificity domain" on this toxin (Ge, A. Z., Shivarova, N. I., and Dean, D. H. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 4037-4041). These mutant proteins have had regions of their genes reciprocally exchanged with the cryIA(c) gene. A B. mori receptor binding region on CryIA(a) toxin includes the amino-terminal portion of the hypervariable region, amino acids 332-450, which is identical to the previously described B. mori specificity determining region. These data provide direct evidence that delta-endotoxins contain a tract of amino acids that comprise a binding region and as a results determines the specificity of a toxin.  相似文献   

18.
The Bacillus thuringiensis cryIA(a) and cryIA(c) gene specificity regions were probed by creating and testing hybrid toxins both in vivo and in vitro against cultured insect cells or dissociated midgut epithelial cells. Toxin threshold dose determinations revealed that CryIA(c) is highly active against cultured Choristoneure fumiterana cells (CF-1) whereas CryIA(a) is nontoxic. In live insect bioassays, a reversed order of toxicity was observed. Hybrid analysis reversed that the CryIA(c) toxicity-determining region is located between codons 258 and 510. Two smaller subsections of this region (residues 258–358 and 450–510) were able to confer toxicity, although at lower levels, and one region (358–450) was present where progressive substitutions of CryIA(a) with cryIA(c) sequences had no effect. Exchanging the non-homologous N-terminal regions of CryIA(c) with CryIE suggested that the W-terminus does not play a role in specificity. One hybrid clone, MP80, displays a 99.3% homology to CryIA(b) but shows an 800-fold increase in toxicity to CF–1 cells relative to that shown by CryIA(b). Direct comparison between live Bombyx mori bioassays and a newly developed in vitro lawn assay using dissociated midgut epithelial cells from the same insect revealed striking differences in toxicity. The toxicity-determining region for B. mori larvae was determined to be between codons 283 and 450, although the 450–620 codon region may exert an influence on toxicity. In general, native or hybrid toxins showing little or no insect intoxication were very active against the epithelial cells, suggesting that factors other than toxin amino acid sequence play an important role in determining toxin specificity.  相似文献   

19.
delta-Endotoxin gene of Bacillus thuringiensis HD-1 var kurstaki codes for the insecticidal crystal protein (ICP) specific for lepidopteran insects. Since the N-terminal half of the toxin is sufficient both for insect specificity and toxicity, the coding sequence of this part of the gene CryIA(b) was amplified by PCR and cloned in pUC19. As there was no expression of immunologically detectable delta-endotoxin in this clone in E. coli, the amplified ICP gene was transferred to an expression vector pGEx2T. Restriction mapping and immunoblotting confirmed the presence and expression of the CryIA(b) gene. This insert should be suitable for expression in plant system if it is mobilized into a plant binary vector.  相似文献   

20.
Binding sites for insecticidal toxins of Bacillus thuringiensis are located in the brush border membranes of insect midguts. Two approaches were used to investigate the interactions of B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki HD-73 CryIA(c) toxin with brush border membrane vesicles from sensitive and naturally resistant insects: 125I-toxin-vesicle binding assays and protein blots probed with 125I-CryIA(c) toxin. In bioassays, Manduca sexta and Heliothis virescens larvae were highly sensitive, Helicoverpa zea larvae were moderately sensitive, and Spodoptera frugiperda larvae were resistant to CryIA(c) toxin. Studies of binding of 125I-CryIA(c) toxin to brush border membrane vesicles from the larval midguts revealed that all insects tested had high-affinity, saturable binding sites. Significantly, S. frugiperda larvae bind but are not killed by CryIA(c) toxin. Labeled CryIA(c) toxin incubated with protein blots identifies a major binding molecule of 120 kDa for M. sexta and 148 kDa for S. frugiperda. H. virescens and H. zea are more complex, containing 155-, 120-, 103-, 90-, and 63-kDa proteins as putative toxin-binding molecules. H. virescens also contains a minor toxin-binding protein of 81 kDa. These experiments provide information that can be applied toward a more detailed characterization of B. thuringiensis toxin-binding proteins.  相似文献   

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