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1.
Two new crystal protein genes, cry19A and orf2, isolated from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. jegathesan were cloned and characterized. The cry19A gene encodes a 74.7-kDa protein, and the orf2 gene encodes a 60-kDa protein. Cry19A contains the five conserved blocks present in most B. thuringiensis delta-endotoxins. The ORF2 amino acid sequence is similar to that of the carboxy terminus of Cry4 proteins. The cry 19A gene was expressed independently or in combination with orf2 in a crystal-negative B. thuringiensis host. The proteins accumulated as inclusions. Purified inclusions containing either Cry19A alone or Cry19A and ORF2 together were toxic to Anopheles stephensi and Culex pipiens mosquito larvae. They were more toxic to C. pipiens than to A. stephensi. However, inclusions containing Cry19A and ORF2 together were more toxic than inclusions of Cry19A alone but less toxic than the wild-type inclusions of B. thuringiensis subsp. jegathesan.  相似文献   

2.
A cry2A-type gene, designated as cry2(SKW), was cloned from Bacillus thuringiensis serovar sotto SKW01-10.2-06, and some unique features of the gene were revealed. The cry2(SKW) gene encoded a polypeptide of 635 residues with a predicted molecular mass of 71,137 Da. Cry2(SKW) had 95.4% identity with Cry2Aa in amino acid sequence and was two residues longer than Cry2Aa. Two open reading frames (ORFs), designated as orf1 and orf2, were present upstream of the cry2(SKW) and showed high homology with the corresponding ORFs in the cry2Aa operon. The Orf2 from SKW01-10.2-06 contained a region of repeated sequences. However, unlike Cry2Aa, Cry2(SKW) formed the cuboidal crystalline inclusions when the cry2(SKW) gene was expressed in an acrystalliferous B. thuringiensis strain in the absence of the upstream ORFs. Furthermore, Cry2(SKW) was less toxic to a lepidopteran species, Bombyx mori, than Cry2Aa in spite of high homology between the two proteins. Received: 17 July 1996 / Accepted: 5 December 1996  相似文献   

3.
Unique strains of Bacillus thuringiensis, that belong to the four H serogroups (serovar sumiyoshiensis, serovar fukuokaensis, serovar darmstadiensis, and serovar japonensis) and produce spherical parasporal inclusions specifically toxic to lepidopteran larvae, were examined for comparative analysis of the genes encoding δ-endotoxin proteins. Gene analysis revealed that there is no difference between the four strains in nucleotide sequences of the 1,937-bp DNA segment covering the four conserved regions and a partial sequence of the block 5 region. Surprisingly, the nucleotide sequence of the four strains showed a 100% homology with that of the corresponding region of the cry9D gene encoding a δ-endotoxin protein, which had been reported to be active on the scarabaeid coleopterans. Alignment analysis revealed that the N-terminal half (16–660) amino acid sequence of the four proteins shared relatively high homologies (27.7–35.8%) with those of the Cry9Ba, Cry9Ca, and Cry1Ba proteins, while lower homologies with those of the Cry3Aa, Cry8Ca, and Cry1Aa proteins. The results show that the cry9D gene is retained in multiple heterogeneous H serovars of Lepidoptera-specific B. thuringiensis populations naturally occurring in soil environments of Japan. Received: 4 May 1998 / Accepted: 21 July 1998  相似文献   

4.
Xia L  Sun Y  Ding X  Fu Z  Mo X  Zhang H  Yuan Z 《Current microbiology》2005,51(1):53-58
Heterologous DNA fragments (20-kb) associated with Cry1 crystal proteins (protoxins) from a soil-isolated Bacillus thuringiensis strain 4.0718 were isolated and analyzed. RFLP patterns of the PCR products showed that the 20-kb DNA fragments harbored cry1Aa, cry1Ac, cry2Aa, and cry2Ab genes. Furthermore, a 4.2-kb DNA fragment, which contained the promoter, the coding region, and the terminator of cry1Ac gene, was cloned from the 20-kb DNAs by PCR, and then the cry1Ac gene was expressed in an acrystalliferous B. thuringiensis strain 4Q7 by using E. coli-B. thuringiensis shuttle vector pHT3101. SDS-PAGE and microscopy studies revealed that the recombinant could express 130-kDa Cry1Ac protoxin and produce bipyramidal crystals during sporulation. Bioassay results proved that crystal-spore mixture from the recombinant was toxic to Plutella xylostella. This was the first report of cry-type genes present on 20-kb DNA associated with Cry1 protoxins of B. thuringiensis.  相似文献   

5.
The cry gene content of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. aizawai HD-133 was analyzed by a combination of high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and exclusive PCR. A total of six cry genes were detected in genomic DNA purified from HD-133, four from the cry1 family (cry1Aa, cry1Ab, cry1C, and cry1D) as well as a gene each from the cry2 (cry2B) and the cry1I families. To directly determine which genes were expressed and crystallized in the purified parasporal inclusions, solubilized and trypsinized HD-133 crystals were subjected to chromatographic separation by HPLC. Only three proteins, Cry1Ab, Cry1C, and Cry1D, were found, in a 60/37/3 ratio. Dot blot analysis of total mRNA purified from HD-133 showed that both the cry2B and cry1I genes, but not the cry1Aa gene, were transcribed. Cloning and sequencing of the cry1Aa gene revealed an inserted DNA sequence within the cry coding sequence, resulting in a disrupted reading frame. Taken together, our results show that combining crystal protein analysis with a genetic approach is a highly complementary and powerful way to assess the potential of B. thuringiensis isolates for new insecticidal genes and specificities. Furthermore, based on the number of cryptic genes found in HD-133, the total cry gene content of B. thuringiensis strains may be higher than previously thought.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
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   

9.
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is the major source for transfer of genes to impart insect resistance in transgenic plants. Cry2A proteins of Bt are promising candidates for management of resistance development in insects due to their difference from the currently used Cry1A proteins, in structure and insecticidal mechanism. Two insecticidal crystal protein genes of Bt, viz. cry2Aa and cry2Ab were cloned from new isolates of Bt, 22-4 and 22-11, respectively. Expression of both the genes was studied in an acrystalliferous strain of Bt (4Q7) by fusing the cry2Aa and cry2Ab genes downstream of cry2Aa promoter and orf1 + orf2 sequences. Western blot analysis revealed a low level expression of the cloned cry2Aa and cry2Ab genes in the recombinant Bt strains. High-level expression of cry2Aa and cry2Ab genes was achieved in the recombinant E. coli by cloning the cry2A genes under the control of the T7 promoter.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The crystal morphology and the profiles of genes encoding protein toxins (Cry and Cyt) were analyzed in 12 Bacillus thuringiensis strains isolated during epizootics in laboratory culture lines of Cydia pomonella, 2 isolates cultured from Leucoma salicis larvae, and 9 reference strains. Epizootic isolates produced crystals of the same bipyramidal shape; however, they revealed a variety of number and type of cry genes. Genes cry1I, cry2Ab, and cry9B were the most frequently observed in epizootic strains. Gene cry1I was noted in of 50% epizootic isolates. Eighty-three percent of them harbored gene cry2Ab. Gene cry9B was found for 42% of strains isolated during epizootics. Three isolates showed the largest number of cry genes and their variety; hence, they were chosen for the toxicity assay of their crystals and spores on C. pomonella larvae. One of them had approximately sixfold higher insecticidal activity than the reference strain B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki BTK STANDARD.  相似文献   

12.
A strain of Bacillus thuringiensis with dual toxicity was isolated from Korean soil samples and named K2. K2 was determined as ssp. kurstaki (H3a3b3c) by serological test and produced bipyramidal-shaped parasporal inclusions. The plasmid and protein profiles of B. thuringiensis K2 were different from those of the reference strain, ssp. kurstaki HD-1. To verify gene type of B. thuringiensis K2, PCR analysis with specific cry gene primers was performed. The result showed that B. thuringiensis K2 had cry1Aa, cry1Ab, cry1C, and cry1D type genes, whereas ssp. kurstaki HD-1 had cry1Aa, cry1Ab, cry1Ac, and cry2 type genes. In addition, B. thuringiensis K2 had high toxicity against Spodoptera exigua and Culex pipiens, whereas B. thuringiensis ssp. kurstaki HD-1 does not have high toxicity against these two insect species. Received: 19 January 2001 / Accepted: 21 February 2001  相似文献   

13.
By a combination of PCR and mass spectrometry, a total of five cry genes (cry1Aa, cry1Ac, cry2Aa, cry2Ab, and cry1Ia) were detected in genomic DNA from the wild-type Bacillus thuringiensis strain 4.0718, and three protoxins (Cry1Aa, Cry1Ac, and Cry2Aa) were identified in the strain's parasporal crystals. These results indicated that this complementary method may be useful in evaluating B. thuringiensis strains at both the gene and protein levels.  相似文献   

14.
A new cry1Ab-type gene encoding the 130 kDa protein of Bacillus thuringiensis NT0423 bipyramidal crystals was cloned, sequenced, and expressed in a crystal-negative B. thuringiensis host. Hybridization experiments revealed that the crystal protein gene is located on a 44 MDa plasmid of B. thuringiensis NT0423. A strong positive signal detected on the 6.6 kb HindIII fragment from B. thuringiensis NT0423 plasmid DNA was cloned and sequenced. The cry1Ab-type gene, designated cry1Af1, consisted of open reading frame of 3453 bp, encoding a protein of 1151 amino acid residues. The polypeptide has the deduced amino acid sequences predicting molecular masses of 130,215 Da. With both Bt I and Br II promoter sequences were found, the B. thuringiensis NT0423 crystal protein gene promoter closely aligned with those of cry1A-type crystal protein gene. When compared with known sequences of other Cry and Cyt proteins, the Cry1Af1 protein showed maximum 93% sequence identity to Cry1Ab protein of B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki. The expressed Cry1Af1 protein in a crystal-negative B. thuringiensis host appears to have strong insecticidal activity against lepidopteran larvae (Plutella xylostella). Crystals containing Cry1Af1 were about six times more toxic than the wild-type crystals of B. thuringiensis NT0423. Received: 20 February 2001 / Accepted: 17 April 2001  相似文献   

15.
The cry8C-type gene designated cry8Ca2, which was cloned and sequenced from a Bacillus thuringiensis isolate HBF-1 in China, consisted of an open reading frame of 3483 bp encoding a protein of 1160 amino-acid residues. Sequence analysis showed that the Cry8Ca2 protoxin of 130.5 kDa had 99.9% sequence homology with the previously reported Cry8Ca1 protein, with one mismatch between the two amino-acid sequences. When the Cry8Ca2 toxin was expressed in a crystal-negative strain of B. thuringiensis (HD-73), elliptical crystals were produced. Cell extracts from this recombinant strain showed insecticidal activity against Anomala corpulenta larva. Mutant cry8Ca2 genes, produced by polymerase chain reaction amplification with Taq DNA polymerase, were used to develop recombinant B. thuringiensis strains. Mutants producing higher levels of insecticidal activity were identified by bioassay. Thirty-five mutants forming crystals were characterized, and two of them showed significantly increased insecticidal activity against A. corpulenta larva. The 50% lethality concentrations (LC50) of the two mutants were 0.2334 × 108 and 0.2591 × 108 colony-forming units g−1, considerably lower than the LC50 of the wild-type strain HBF-1 (0.9583 × 108 CFU g−1) and that of B. thuringiensis serovar japonensis strain Buibui (1.0752 × 108 CFU g−1).  相似文献   

16.
A fusion gene was constructed by combining the cry1Ac gene of Bacillus thuringiensis strain 4.0718 with a neurotoxin gene, hwtx-1, which was synthesized chemically. In this process, an enterokinase recognition site sequence was inserted in frame between two genes, and the fusion gene, including the promoter and the terminator of the cry1Ac gene, was cloned into the shuttle vector pHT304 to obtain a new expression vector, pXL43. A 138-kDa fusion protein was mass-expressed in the recombinant strain XL002, which was generated by transforming pXL43 into B. thuringiensis acrystalliferous strain XBU001. Quantitative analysis indicated that the expressed protein accounted for 61.38% of total cellular proteins. Under atomic force microscopy, there were some bipyramidal crystals with a size of 1.0 × 2.0 μm. Bioassay showed that the fusion crystals from recombinant strain XL002 had a higher toxicity than the original Cry1Ac crystal protein against third-instar larvae of Plutella xylostella, with an LC50 (after 48 h) value of 5.12 μg/mL. The study will enhance the toxicity of B. thuringiensis Cry toxins and set the groundwork for constructing fusion genes of the B. thuringiensis cry gene and other foreign toxin genes and recombinant strains with high toxicity. LiQiu Xia and XiaoShan Long contributed equally to this work.  相似文献   

17.
The cry1-type genes of Bacillus thuringiensis represent the largest cry gene family, which contains 50 distinct holotypes. It is becoming more and more difficult to identify cry1-type genes using current methods because of the increasing number of cry1-type genes. In the present study, an improved PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) method which can distinguish 41 holotypes of cry1-type genes was developed. This improved method was used to identify cry1-type genes in 20 B. thuringiensis strains that are toxic to lepidoptera. The results showed that the improved method can efficiently identify single and clustered cry1-type genes and can be used to evaluate cry1-type genes in novel strain collections of B. thuringiensis. Among the detected cry1-type genes, we identified four novel genes, cry1Ai, cry1Bb, cry1Ja, and cry1La. The bioassay results from the expressed products of the four novel cry genes showed that Cry1Ai2, Cry1Bb2, and Cry1Ja2 were highly toxic against Plutella xylostella, whereas Cry1La2 exhibited no activity. Moreover, Cry1Ai2 had good lethal activity against Ostrinia furnacalis, Hyphantria cunea, Chilo suppressalis, and Bombyx mori larvae and considerable weight loss activity against Helicoverpa armigera.  相似文献   

18.
Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis is the most widely used microbial control agent against mosquitoes and blackflies. Its insecticidal success is based on an arsenal of toxins, such as Cry4A, Cry4B, Cry11A, and Cyt1A, harbored in the parasporal crystal of the bacterium. A fifth toxin, Cry10Aa, is synthesized at very low levels; previous attempts to clone and express Cry10Aa were limited, and no parasporal body was formed. By using a new strategy, the whole Cry10A operon was cloned in the pSTAB vector, where both open reading frames ORF1 and ORF2 (and the gap between the two) were located, under the control of the cyt1A operon and the STAB-SD stabilizer sequence characteristic of this vector. Once the acrystalliferous mutant 4Q7 of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis was transformed with this construct, parasporal bodies were observed by phase-contrast microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. Discrete, ca. 0.9-μm amorphous parasporal bodies were observed in the mature sporangia, which were readily purified by gradient centrifugation once autolysis had occurred. Pure parasporal bodies showed two major bands of ca. 68 and 56 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. These bands were further characterized by N-terminal sequencing of tryptic fragments using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry analysis, which identified both bands as the products of ORF1 and ORF2, respectively. Bioassays against fourth-instar larvae of Aedes aegypti of spore-crystal complex and pure crystals of Cry10Aa gave estimated 50% lethal concentrations of 2,061 ng/ml and 239 ng/ml, respectively. Additionally, synergism was clearly detected between Cry10A and Cyt1A, as the synergistic levels (potentiation rates) were estimated at 13.3 for the mixture of Cyt1A crystals and Cry10Aa spore-crystal complex and 12.6 for the combination of Cyt1A and Cry10Aa pure crystals.The subspecies Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis (serotype H-14) was discovered by Goldberg and Margalit in 1977 (11). To date, its insecticidal potential has not been overcome by any other bacterium (or any biological control agent) as an effective control measure against mosquito and blackfly larvae (8). Recently, its toxicity spectrum has been expanded to a coleopteran pest, the coffee berry borer (Hypothenemus hampei) (23), indicating that this strain may have potential versatility. Also, the so-called pBtoxis megaplasmid harbored in this strain, containing all the endotoxin-encoding genes found in its parasporal crystal, including cry4A, cry4B, cry10A, cry11A, and cyt1A, was recently sequenced (1). Among many other interesting aspects of this serotype, the occurrence of this mosquitocidal arsenal in one strain and their synergistic interaction make this bacterium scientifically and technologically attractive.The parasporal crystal of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis contains large amounts of Cry4A, Cry4B, Cry11A, and Cyt1A toxins (14), and consequently, most of the knowledge about the toxicity of this strain has been focused on these proteins, acting either as a complex (31) or tested separately (6). Although the cry10Aa gene was originally cloned in 1986 (known then as cryIVC) (30), to date, little is known about cry10Aa and the protein it encodes, mostly due to its very low levels of expression (10) in B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis. Interestingly, cry10Aa is an operon as it includes two open reading frames (ORFs), previously reported as pBt047 and pBt048 (hereafter referred to only as ORF1 and ORF2, respectively), separated by a 48-bp untranslated gap (1). ORF1 contains the complete δ-endotoxin sequence (active toxin), with a coding capacity for a 78-kDa protein. Interestingly, ORF2 shows high identity with the coding sequence of the C-terminal half of Cry4-type proteins, with a coding capacity for a 56-kDa protein. Therefore, it is believed that a putative ancestral cry10Aa gene is similar in size to the cry4-type genes (ca. 4 kbp), but either a small sequence had been inserted in the middle of the coding sequence or site mutations produced end codons (two end codons flank the gap) in this region (1).Previous attempts to clone and express the cry10Aa gene included ORF1 and only part of ORF2 (7, 10, 30). This was a reasonable strategy, as most of the so-called “complete” protoxins are partially digested to become active toxins (δ-endotoxins) (28), and ORF1 included the complete sequence to code the Cry10Aa δ-endotoxin. However, in all these cases, the expression levels were very low, and no parasporal body was formed. Similar results were obtained when the promoter was changed and a stabilizing sequence was added to the construction (13). The low expression levels achieved in these cases led to conclusions that assumed low toxic levels of Cry10Aa when tested against mosquito larvae (30). In spite of the low toxicity of Cry10Aa found against mosquito larvae, a synergistic effect was reported between Cry10Aa and Cry4Ba toxins in Culex (7). Obtaining high levels of expression and crystallization of Cry10Aa are required to properly characterize and understand the toxic spectrum of this protein.In this report, we show the formation of parasporal bodies of Cry10Aa, achieved by cloning the whole Cry10Aa operon under the control of the cyt1A promoter and the STAB-SD sequence. We also show that Cry10Aa is as toxic as most of the other B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis toxins acting separately, and in synergism with the Cyt1A toxin.  相似文献   

19.
Three cry9 genes, cry9Da4, cry9Eb2, and cry9Ee1, were cloned from Bacillus thuringiensis strain T03B001 using a high-resolution melting analysis method. All three cry9 genes were overexpressed in Escherichia coli Rosetta (DE3), and the expressed products Cry9Eb2 and Cry9Ee1 were shown to be toxic to Plutella xylostella and Ostrinia furnacalis, but not to Helicoverpa armigera or Colaphellus bowringi. The bioassay of Cry9Eb2 and Cry9Ee1 against Cry1Ac-resistant P. xylostella strains indicated that both novel Cry9 toxins exhibited no cross-resistance with Cry1Ac. Cry9Eb2 and Cry9Ee1 can be applied not only for P. xylostella and O. furnacalis control, but also for the Cry1Ac-resistance management of pests.  相似文献   

20.
The cry19A operon of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. jegathesan encodes two proteins, mosquitocidal Cry19A (ORF1; 75 kDa) and an ORF2 (60 kDa) of unknown function. Expression of the cry19A operon in an acrystalliferous strain of B. thuringiensis (4Q7) yielded one small crystal per cell, whereas no crystals were produced when cry19A or orf2 was expressed alone. To determine the function of the ORF2 protein, different combinations of Cry19A, ORF2, and the N- or C-terminal half of Cry1C were synthesized in strain 4Q7. Stable crystalline inclusions of these fusion proteins similar in shape to those in the strain harboring the wild-type operon were observed in sporulating cells. Comparative analysis showed that ORF2 shares considerable amino acid sequence identity with the C-terminal region of large Cry proteins. Together, these results suggest that ORF2 assists in synthesis and crystallization of Cry19A by functioning like the C-terminal domain characteristic of Cry protein in the 130-kDa mass range. In addition, to determine whether overexpression of the cry19A operon stabilized its shape and increased Cry19A yield, it was expressed under the control of the strong chimeric cyt1A-p/STAB-SD promoter. Interestingly, in contrast to the expression seen with the native promoter, overexpression of the operon yielded uniform bipyramidal crystals that were 4-fold larger on average than the wild-type crystal. In bioassays using the 4th instar larvae of Culex quinquefasciatus, the strain producing the larger Cry19A crystal showed moderate larvicidal activity that was 4-fold (95% lethal concentration [LC(95)] = 1.9 μg/ml) more toxic than the activity produced in the strain harboring the wild-type operon (LC(95) = 8.2 μg/ml).  相似文献   

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