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1.
Insect proteases are implicated in Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal proteins mode of action determining toxin specificity and sensitivity. Few data are available on the involvement of proteases in the later steps of toxicity such as protease interaction with toxin-receptor complexes and the pore formation process. In this study, a Colorado potato beetle (CPB) midgut membrane metalloprotease was found to be involved in the proteolytic processing of Cry3Aa. Interaction of Cry3Aa with BBMV membrane proteases resulted in a distinct pattern of proteolysis. Cleavage was demonstrated to occur in protease accessible regions of domain III and was specifically inhibited by the metalloprotease inhibitors 1,10-phenanthroline and acetohydroxamic acid. Proteolytic inhibition by a peptide representing a segment of proteolysis in domain III and the metalloprotease inhibitor acetohydroxamic acid correlated with increased pore formation, evidencing that Cry3Aa is a specific target of a CPB membrane metalloprotease that degrades potentially active toxin.  相似文献   

2.
To investigate whether membrane proteases are involved in the activity of Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal toxins, the rate of pore formation by trypsin-activated Cry1Aa was monitored in the presence of a variety of protease inhibitors with Manduca sexta midgut brush border membrane vesicles and by a light-scattering assay. Most of the inhibitors tested had no effect on the pore-forming ability of the toxin. However, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, a serine protease inhibitor, promoted pore formation, although this stimulation only occurred at higher inhibitor concentrations than those commonly used to inhibit proteases. Among the metalloprotease inhibitors, o-phenanthroline had no significant effect; EDTA and EGTA reduced the rate of pore formation at pH 10.5, but only EDTA was inhibitory at pH 7.5. Neither chelator affected the properties of the pores already formed after incubation of the vesicles with the toxin. Taken together, these results indicate that, once activated, Cry1Aa is completely functional and does not require further proteolysis. The effect of EDTA and EGTA is probably better explained by their ability to chelate divalent cations that could be necessary for the stability of the toxin's receptors or involved elsewhere in the mechanism of pore formation.  相似文献   

3.
To investigate whether membrane proteases are involved in the activity of Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal toxins, the rate of pore formation by trypsin-activated Cry1Aa was monitored in the presence of a variety of protease inhibitors with Manduca sexta midgut brush border membrane vesicles and by a light-scattering assay. Most of the inhibitors tested had no effect on the pore-forming ability of the toxin. However, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, a serine protease inhibitor, promoted pore formation, although this stimulation only occurred at higher inhibitor concentrations than those commonly used to inhibit proteases. Among the metalloprotease inhibitors, o-phenanthroline had no significant effect; EDTA and EGTA reduced the rate of pore formation at pH 10.5, but only EDTA was inhibitory at pH 7.5. Neither chelator affected the properties of the pores already formed after incubation of the vesicles with the toxin. Taken together, these results indicate that, once activated, Cry1Aa is completely functional and does not require further proteolysis. The effect of EDTA and EGTA is probably better explained by their ability to chelate divalent cations that could be necessary for the stability of the toxin's receptors or involved elsewhere in the mechanism of pore formation.  相似文献   

4.
An ADAM metalloprotease is a Cry3Aa Bacillus thuringiensis toxin receptor   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal proteins toxic action relies on the interaction with receptor molecules on insect midgut target cells. Here, we describe an ADAM metalloprotease as a novel type of B. thuringiensis toxin receptor on the basis of the following data: (i) by ligand blot and N-terminal analysis, we detected a Colorado potato beetle Cry3Aa toxin binding molecule that shares homology with an ADAM10 metalloprotease; (ii) Colorado potato beetle brush border membrane vesicles display ADAM activity since it cleaves an ADAM fluorogenic substrate; (iii) Cry3Aa acts as a competitor of the cleavage of the ADAM fluorogenic substrate; (iv) Cry3Aa sequence contains the recognition motif R(345)FQPGYYGND(354) present in ADAM10 substrates. Accordingly, a peptide representative of the recognition motif localized within loop 1 of Cry3Aa domain II (Ac-F(341)HTRFQPGYYGNDSFN(358)-NH(2)) effectively prevented Cry3Aa proteolytic processing and nearly abolished pore formation, evidencing the functional significance of the Cry3Aa-ADAM interaction in relation to this toxin mode of action.  相似文献   

5.
Bacillus thuringiensis Cry3Aa toxin is a coleopteran specific toxin highly active against Colorado Potato Beetle (CPB).We have recently shown thatCry3Aa toxin is proteolytically cleaved by CPBmidgut membrane associated metalloproteases and that this cleavage is inhibited by ADAMmetalloprotease inhibitors. In the present study, we investigated whether the Cry3Aa toxin is a calmodulin (CaM) binding protein, as it is the case of several different ADAMshedding substrates. In pull-down assays using agarose beads conjugated with CaM, we demonstrated that Cry3Aa toxin specifically binds to CaMin a calcium-independent manner. Furthermore, we used gel shift assays and (1) H NMRspectra to demonstrate that CaMbinds to a 16-amino acid synthetic peptide corresponding to residues N256-V271 within the domain I of Cry3Aa toxin. Finally, to investigate whether CaM has any effect on Cry3Aa toxin CPBmidgut membrane associated proteolysis, cleavage assays were performed in the presence of the CaM-specific inhibitor trifluoperazine. We showed that trifluoperazine significantly increased Cry3Aa toxin proteolysis and also decreased Cry3Aa larval toxicity.  相似文献   

6.
Bacillus thuringiensis Cry toxins exert their toxic effect by specific recognition of larval midgut proteins leading to oligomerization of the toxin, membrane insertion and pore formation. The exposed domain II loop regions of Cry toxins have been shown to be involved in receptor binding. Insect cadherins have shown to be functionally involved in toxin binding facilitating toxin oligomerization. Here, we isolated a VHH (VHHA5) antibody by phage display that binds Cry3Aa loop 1 and competed with the binding of Cry3Aa to Tenebrio molitor brush border membranes. VHHA5 also competed with the binding of Cry3Aa to a cadherin fragment (CR12) that was previously shown to be involved in binding and toxicity of Cry3Aa, indicating that Cry3Aa binds CR12 through domain II loop 1. Moreover, we show that a loop 1 mutant, previously characterized to have increased toxicity to T. molitor, displayed a correlative enhanced binding affinity to T. molitor CR12 and to VHHA5. These results show that Cry3Aa domain II loop 1 is a binding site of CR12 T. molitor cadherin.  相似文献   

7.
Binding and pore formation constitute key steps in the mode of action of Bacillus thuringiensis delta-endotoxins. In this work, we present a comparative analysis of toxin-binding capacities of proteolytically processed Cry3A, Cry3B and Cry3C toxins to brush border membranes (BBMV) of the Colorado potato beetle Leptinotarsa decemlineata (CPB), a major potato coleopteran-insect pest. Competition experiments showed that the three Cry3 proteolytically activated toxins share a common binding site. Also heterologous competition experiments showed that Cry3Aa and Cry3Ca toxins have an extra binding site that is not shared with Cry3Ba toxin. The pore formation activity of the three different Cry3 toxins is analysed. High pore-formation activities were observed in Cry3 toxins obtained by proteolytical activation with CPB BBMV in contrast to toxins activated with either trypsin or chymotrypsin proteases. The pore-formation activity correlated with the formation of soluble oligomeric structures. Our data support that, similarly to the Cry1A toxins, the Cry3 oligomer is formed after receptor binding and before membrane insertion, forming a pre-pore structure that is insertion-competent.  相似文献   

8.
The midgut proteases of the Bacillus thuringiensis resistant and susceptible populations of the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella L. were characterized by using protease specific substrates and inhibitors. The midgut contained trypsin-like proteases of molecular weights of 97, 32, 29.5, 27.5, and 25 kDa. Of these five proteases, 29.5 kDa trypsin-like protease was the most predominant in activation of protoxins of Cry1Aa and Cry1Ab. The activation of Cry1Ab protoxin by midgut protease was fast (T(1/2) of 23-24 min) even at a protoxin:protease ratio of 250:1. The protoxin activation appeared to be multi-step process, and at least seven intermediates were observed before formation of a stable toxin of about 57.4 kDa from protoxin of about 133 kDa. Activation of Cry1Aa was faster than that of Cry1Ab on incubation of protoxins with midgut proteases and bovine trypsin. The protoxin and toxin forms of Cry proteins did not differ in toxicity towards larvae of P. xylostella. The differences in susceptibility of two populations to B. thuringiensis Cry1Ab were not due to midgut proteolytic activity. Further, the proteolytic patterns of Cry1A protoxins were similar in the resistant as well as susceptible populations of P. xylostella.  相似文献   

9.
The Cry4Aa delta-endotoxin from Bacillus thuringiensis is toxic to larvae of Culex, Anopheles, and Aedes mosquitoes, which are vectors of important human tropical diseases. With the objective of designing modified toxins with improved potency that could be used as biopesticides, we determined the structure of this toxin in its functional form at a resolution of 2.8 angstroms. Like other Cry delta-endotoxins, the activated Cry4Aa toxin consists of three globular domains, a seven-alpha-helix bundle responsible for pore formation (domain I) and the following two other domains having structural similarities with carbohydrate binding proteins: a beta-prism (domain II) and a plant lectin-like beta-sandwich (domain III). We also studied the effect on toxicity of amino acid substitutions and deletions in three loops located at the surface of the putative receptor binding domain II of Cry4Aa. Our results indicate that one loop is an important determinant of toxicity, presumably through attachment of Cry4Aa to the surface of mosquito cells. The availability of the Cry4Aa structure should guide further investigations aimed at the molecular basis of the target specificity and membrane insertion of Cry endotoxins.  相似文献   

10.
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) Cry8D insecticidal proteins are unique among Cry8 family proteins in terms of its insecticidal activity against adult Scarab beetles, such as Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica Newman). From the sequence homology with other Bt Cry proteins especially those active against beetles, such as Cry3Aa whose 3D structure is available, the structure of the Cry8D protein has been predicted to be a typical three-domain Cry protein type. In addition, the activation process of Cry8D in gut juice of susceptible insects is presumed to be similar to that of Cry3A (Yamaguchi et al., 2008). In this study, the activation process of Cry8Da in insect gut juice was closely examined. Japanese beetle gut juice proteases digested the 130 kDa Cry8Da protein to produce a 64 kDa protein. This 64 kDa protein was active against both adult and larval Japanese beetle and considered to be an activated toxin. N-terminal sequencing of this 64 kDa protein revealed that the Cry8Da leader sequence consisting of 63 amino acid residues from M1 to F63 was removed. As in the case of Cry3Aa, the proteases further digested the 64 kDa protein to two 8 kDa and 54 kDa fragments. N-terminal amino acid analysis of these smaller fragments indicated that the proteases digested the loop between Alpha Helix (Alpha for short) 3 and Alpha 4. This means that the 8 kDa fragment consists of Alpha 1-3 of Domain I and that the 54 kDa fragment contains the remaining Domain I and full Domain II and Domain III. Size exclusion chromatography and anion exchange chromatography could not separate these 64, 54 and 8 kDa proteins suggesting that the 54 kDa and 8 kDa fragments are still forming the toxin complex equivalent to the 64 kDa protein by size and ionic charge. The sequencing and chromatography results suggest that the gut juice proteases merely nicked the loop between Alpha 3 and Alpha 4. This nicking process appeared to be essential for receptor binding of the Cry8Da toxin. BBMV binding assay revealed that the Cry8Da toxin bound to BBMV preparations from both adult and larval Japanese beetle only after the loop was nicked. Only the 54 kDa fragment bound to the BBMV preparations but not the 64 kDa protein. Ligand blot showed that the protease activated Cry8Da toxin, presumably the 54 kDa fragment, bound to specific BBMV proteins, one or more of those would be receptor(s). The sizes and binding affinities of these Cry8Da-bound proteins of Japanese beetle BBMV differed between larvae and adults.  相似文献   

11.
Cry4Ba, isolated from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis, is specifically toxic to the larvae of Aedes and Anopheles mosquitoes. The structure of activated Cry4Ba toxin has been determined by multiple isomorphous replacement with anomalous scattering and refined to R(cryst) = 20.5% and R(free)= 21.8% at 1.75 Angstroms resolution. It resembles previously reported Cry toxin structures but shows the following distinctions. In domain I the helix bundle contains only the long and amphipathic helices alpha3-alpha7. The N-terminal helices alpha1-alpha2b, absent due to proteolysis during crystallisation, appear inessential to toxicity. In domain II the beta-sheet prism presents short apical loops without the beta-ribbon extension of inner strands, thus placing the receptor combining sites close to the sheets. In domain III the beta-sandwich contains a helical extension from the C-terminal strand beta23, which interacts with a beta-hairpin excursion from the edge of the outer sheet. The structure provides a rational explanation of recent mutagenesis and biophysical data on this toxin. Furthermore, added to earlier structures from the Cry toxin family, Cry4Ba completes a minimal structural database covering the Coleoptera, Lepidoptera, Diptera and Lepidoptera/Diptera specificity classes. A multiple structure alignment found that the Diptera-specific Cry4Ba is structurally more closely similar to the Lepidoptera-specific Cry1Aa than the Coleoptera-specific Cry3Aa, but most distantly related to Lepidoptera/Diptera-specific Cry2Aa. The structures are most divergent in domain II, supporting the suggestion that this domain has a major role in specificity determination. They are most similar in the alpha3-alpha7 major fragment of domain I, which contains the alpha4-alpha5 hairpin crucial to pore formation. The collective knowledge of Cry toxin structure and mutagenesis data will lead to a more critical understanding of the structural basis for receptor binding and pore formation, as well as allowing the scope of diversity to be better appreciated.  相似文献   

12.
Hemipteran pests including aphids are not particularly susceptible to the effects of insecticidal Cry toxins derived from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis. We examined the physiological basis for the relatively low toxicity of Cry1Ac and Cry3Aa against the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum (Harris). Cry1Ac was efficiently hydrolyzed by aphid stomach membrane associated cysteine proteases (CP) producing a 60 kDa mature toxin, whereas Cry3Aa was incompletely processed and partially degraded. Cry1Ac bound to the aphid gut epithelium but showed low aphid toxicity in bioassays. Feeding of aphids on Cry1Ac in the presence or absence of GalNAc, suggested that Cry1Ac gut binding was glycan mediated. In vitro binding of biotinylated-Cry1Ac to gut BBMVs and competition assays using unlabeled Cry1Ac and GalNAc confirmed binding specificity as well as glycan mediation of Cry1Ac binding. Although Cry3Aa binding to the aphid gut membrane was not detected, Cry3Aa bound 25 and 37 kDa proteins in aphid gut BBMV in ligand blot analysis and competition assays confirmed the binding specificity of Cry3Aa. This, combined with low toxicity in feeding assays, suggests that Cry3Aa does bind the gut epithelium to some extent. This is the first systematic examination of the physiological basis for the low efficacy of Cry toxins against aphids, and analysis of Cry toxin-aphid gut interaction.  相似文献   

13.
To test the possibility that proteolytic cleavage by midgut juice enzymes could enhance or inhibit the activity of Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal toxins, once activated, the effects of different toxins on the membrane potential of the epithelial cells of isolated Manduca sexta midguts in the presence and absence of midgut juice were measured. While midgut juice had little effect on the activity of Cry1Aa, Cry1Ac, Cry1Ca, Cry1Ea, and R233A, a mutant of Cry1Aa from which one of the four salt bridges linking domains I and II of the toxin was eliminated, it greatly increased the activity of Cry1Ab. In addition, when tested in the presence of a cocktail of protease inhibitors or when boiled, midgut juice retained almost completely its capacity to enhance Cry1Ab activity, suggesting that proteases were not responsible for the stimulation. On the other hand, in the absence of midgut juice, the cocktail of protease inhibitors also enhanced the activity of Cry1Ab, suggesting that proteolytic cleavage by membrane proteases could render the toxin less effective. The lower toxicity of R233A, despite a similar in vitro pore-forming ability, compared with Cry1Aa, cannot be accounted for by an increased susceptibility to midgut proteases. Although these assays were performed under conditions approaching those found in the larval midgut, the depolarizing activities of the toxins correlated only partially with their toxicities.  相似文献   

14.
15.
BUPM95 is a Bacillusthuringiensis subsp. kurstaki strain producing the Vip3Aa16 toxin with an interesting insecticidal activity against the Lepidopteran larvae Ephestia kuehniella. Study of different steps in the mode of action of this Vegetative Insecticidal Protein on the Mediterranean flour moth (E. kuehniella) was carried out in the aim to investigate the origin of the higher susceptibility of this insect to Vip3Aa16 toxin compared to that of the Egyptian cotton leaf worm Spodoptera littoralis. Using E. kuehniella gut juice, protoxin proteolysis generated a major band corresponding to the active toxin and another band of about 22 kDa, whereas the activation of Vip3Aa16 by S. littoralis gut juice proteases generated less amount of the 62 kDa active form and three other proteolysis products. As demonstrated by zymogram analysis, the difference in proteolysis products was due to the variability of proteases in the two gut juices larvae. The study of the interaction of E. kuehniella BBMV with biotinylated Vip3Aa16 showed that this toxin bound to a putative receptor of 65 kDa compared to the 55 and 100 kDa receptors recognized in S. littoralis BBMV. The histopathological observations demonstrated similar damage caused by the toxin in the two larvae midguts. These results demonstrate that the step of activation, mainly, is at the origin of the difference of susceptibility of these two larvae towards B. thuringiensis Vip3Aa16 toxin.  相似文献   

16.
To study the potential for the emergence of resistance in Aedes aegypti populations, a wild colony was subjected to selective pressure with Cry11Aa, one of four endotoxins that compose the Bacillus thuringiensis serovar israelensis toxin. This bacterium is the base component of the most important biopesticide used in the control of mosquitoes worldwide. After 54 generations of selection, significant resistance levels were observed. At the beginning of the selection experiment, the half lethal concentration was 26.3 ng/mL and had risen to 345.6 ng/mL by generation 54. The highest rate of resistance, 13.1, was detected in the 54th generation. Because digestive proteases play a key role in the processing and activation of B. thuringiensis toxin, we analysed the involvement of insect gut proteases in resistance to the Cry11Aa B. thuringiensis serovar israelensis toxin. The protease activity from larval gut extracts from the Cry11Aa resistant population was lower than that of the B. thuringiensisserovar israelensis susceptible colony. We suggest that differences in protoxin proteolysis could contribute to the resistance of this Ae. aegypti colony.  相似文献   

17.
The cross-resistance spectrum and biochemical mechanism of resistance to the Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1Ab toxin was studied in a field-derived strain of Ostrinia nubilalis (Hübner) (Lepidoptera: Crambidae) that was further selected in the laboratory for high levels (>1000-fold) of resistance to Cry1Ab. The resistant strain exhibited high levels of cross-resistance to Cry1Ac and Cry1Aa but only low levels of cross-resistance (<4-fold) to Cry1F. In addition, there was no significant difference between the levels of resistance to full-length and trypsin-activated Cry1Ab protein. No differences in activity of luminal gut proteases or altered proteolytic processing of the toxin were observed in the resistant strain. Significantly reduced binding of radiolabeled Cry1Aa was observed in the resistant strain whereas binding of Cry1Ab and Cry1Ac was practically the same in both resistant and susceptible strains. The interpretation of the overall data seems to suggest the involvement of an alteration in the binding of Cry1A toxins to a common receptor, which is more clearly revealed by the binding assays using radiolabeled Cry1Aa.  相似文献   

18.
The binding of Bacillus thuringiensis δ-endotoxin to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMVs) from the target insect larval midgut comprises with not only a reversible but also an irreversible component. The irreversible binding of δ-endotoxin is thought to be a pathologically important factor. Here, we studied the irreversible binding of Cry1Aa to the BBMVs of Bombyx mori. The 125I-labeled Cry1Aa bound to the solubilized brush border membrane (BBM) through rapid dissociation only, unlike the binding to BBMVs, indicating that the toxin bound to the solubilized BBM through only a reversible process. Low-temperature sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis revealed that the toxin bound irreversibly to BBMVs formed an oligomer of 220 kDa, whereas that bound reversibly to the solubilized BBM did not oligomeraize. When the 125I-labeled Cry1Aa bound irreversibly to the BBMVs was digested by proteinase K, approximately 40% of the toxin observed to be resistant to proteinase K. The molecular mass of the toxin resistant to proteinase K was 60 kDa, suggesting that the irreversible binding comprise two forms. These results support the notion that the irreversible binding of the toxin to BBMVs is due to the insertion of the toxin into the lipid bilayers and oligomerization to form channels.  相似文献   

19.
To test the possibility that proteolytic cleavage by midgut juice enzymes could enhance or inhibit the activity of Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal toxins, once activated, the effects of different toxins on the membrane potential of the epithelial cells of isolated Manduca sexta midguts in the presence and absence of midgut juice were measured. While midgut juice had little effect on the activity of Cry1Aa, Cry1Ac, Cry1Ca, Cry1Ea, and R233A, a mutant of Cry1Aa from which one of the four salt bridges linking domains I and II of the toxin was eliminated, it greatly increased the activity of Cry1Ab. In addition, when tested in the presence of a cocktail of protease inhibitors or when boiled, midgut juice retained almost completely its capacity to enhance Cry1Ab activity, suggesting that proteases were not responsible for the stimulation. On the other hand, in the absence of midgut juice, the cocktail of protease inhibitors also enhanced the activity of Cry1Ab, suggesting that proteolytic cleavage by membrane proteases could render the toxin less effective. The lower toxicity of R233A, despite a similar in vitro pore-forming ability, compared with Cry1Aa, cannot be accounted for by an increased susceptibility to midgut proteases. Although these assays were performed under conditions approaching those found in the larval midgut, the depolarizing activities of the toxins correlated only partially with their toxicities.  相似文献   

20.
The insecticidal crystal (Cry) proteins produced by Bacillus thuringiensis undergo several conformational changes from crystal inclusion protoxins to membrane-inserted channels in the midgut epithelial cells of the target insect. Here we analyzed the stability of the different forms of Cry1Ab toxin, monomeric toxin, pre-pore complex, and membrane-inserted channel, after urea and thermal denaturation by monitoring intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of the protein and 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid binding to partially unfolded proteins. Our results showed that flexibility of the monomeric toxin was dramatically enhanced upon oligomerization and was even further increased by insertion of the pre-pore into the membrane as shown by the lower concentration of chaotropic agents needed to achieve unfolding of the oligomeric species. The flexibility of the toxin structures is further increased by alkaline pH. We found that the monomer-monomer interaction in the pre-pore is highly stable because urea promotes oligomer denaturation without disassembly. Partial unfolding and limited proteolysis studies demonstrated that domains II and III were less stable and unfold first, followed by unfolding of the most stable domain I, and also that domain I is involved in monomer-monomer interaction. The thermal-induced unfolding and analysis of energy transfer from Trp residues to bound 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid dye showed that in the membrane-inserted pore domains II and III are particularly sensitive to heat denaturation, in contrast to domain I, suggesting that only domain I may be inserted into the membrane. Finally, the insertion into the membrane of the oligomeric pre-pore structure was not affected by pH. However, a looser conformation of the membrane-inserted domain I induced by neutral or alkaline pH correlates with active channel formation. Our studies suggest for the first time that a more flexible conformation of Cry toxin could be necessary for membrane insertion, and this flexible structure is induced by toxin oligomerization. Finally the alkaline pH found in the midgut lumen of lepidopteran insects could increase the flexibility of membrane-inserted domain I necessary for pore formation.  相似文献   

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