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1.
Two mosquitocidal toxins (Mtx) of Bacillus sphaericus, which are produced during vegetative growth, were investigated for their potential to increase toxicity and reduce the expression of insecticide resistance through their interactions with other mosquitocidal proteins. Mtx-1 and Mtx-2 were fused with glutathione S-transferase and produced in Escherichia coli, after which lyophilized powders of these fusions were assayed against Culex quinquefasciatus larvae. Both Mtx proteins showed a high level of activity against susceptible C. quinquefasciatus mosquitoes, with 50% lethal concentrations (LC(50)) of Mtx-1 and Mtx-2 of 0.246 and 4.13 microg/ml, respectively. The LC(50)s were 0.406 to 0.430 microg/ml when Mtx-1 or Mtx-2 was mixed with B. sphaericus, and synergy improved activity and reduced resistance levels. When the proteins were combined with a recombinant Bacillus thuringiensis strain that produces Cry11Aa, the mixtures were highly active against Cry11A-resistant larvae and resistance was also reduced. The mixture of two Mtx toxins and B. sphaericus was 10 times more active against susceptible mosquitoes than B. sphaericus alone, demonstrating the influence of relatively low concentrations of these toxins. These results show that, similar to Cyt toxins from B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis, Mtx toxins can increase the toxicity of other mosquitocidal proteins and may be useful for both increasing the activity of commercial bacterial larvicides and managing potential resistance to these substances among mosquito populations.  相似文献   

2.
The Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa mosquitocidal two-component toxin was recently characterized from Bacillus sphaericus strain IAB59 and is uniquely composed of a three-domain Cry protein toxin (Cry48Aa) and a binary (Bin) toxin-like protein (Cry49Aa). Its mode of action has not been elucidated, but a remarkable feature of this protein is the high toxicity against species from the Culex complex, besides its capacity to overcome Culex resistance to the Bin toxin, the major insecticidal factor in B. sphaericus-based larvicides. The goal of this work was to investigate the ultrastructural effects of Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa on midgut cells of Bin-toxin-susceptible and -resistant Culex quinquefasciatus larvae. The major cytopathological effects observed after Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa treatment were intense mitochondrial vacuolation, breakdown of endoplasmic reticulum, production of cytoplasmic vacuoles, and microvillus disruption. These effects were similar in Bin-toxin-susceptible and -resistant larvae and demonstrated that Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa toxin interacts with and displays toxic effects on cells lacking receptors for the Bin toxin, while B. sphaericus IAB59-resistant larvae did not show mortality after treatment with Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa toxin. The cytopathological alterations in Bin-toxin-resistant larvae provoked by Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa treatment were similar to those observed when larvae were exposed to a synergistic mixture of Bin/Cry11Aa toxins. Such effects seemed to result from a combined action of Cry-like and Bin-like toxins. The complex effects caused by Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa provide evidence for the potential of these toxins as active ingredients of a new generation of biolarvicides that conjugate insecticidal factors with distinct sites of action, in order to manage mosquito resistance.Bacillus sphaericus is considered an important entomopathogen due to its capacity to produce insecticidal proteins with specific action against mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae). The binary (Bin) toxin, which is produced during bacterial sporulation and deposited in parasporal crystalline inclusions, is the most important larvicidal factor. Other proteins characterized, such as mosquitocidal toxins (Mtx proteins), can be produced during vegetative growth, and although these proteins may have larvicidal potential, they play a minor role in the toxicity of the native strains since they are produced by vegetative cells and are degraded by B. sphaericus proteinases (20, 30), and do not form components of the spore-crystal preparations that are used in control programs. Recently, a new two-component toxin was characterized from B. sphaericus strain IAB59. This is formed by the proteins Cry48Aa (135 kDa) and Cry49Aa (53 kDa), which are produced as crystalline inclusions (13). The toxin has a unique composition since the Cry48Aa component belongs to the three-domain family of Cry proteins with 30% similarity to the mosquitocidal Cry4Aa protein from Bacillus thuringiensis serovar israelensis, while Cry49Aa is one of the Bin-toxin-like proteins, a family that comprises the Bin toxin from B. sphaericus, in addition to the Cry36 and Cry35 proteins from B. thuringiensis (9, 13).Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa is considered a two-component toxin because neither component shows toxicity alone, whereas both can act in synergy and the optimum level of toxicity to Culex species is achieved when the two are present at an equimolar ratio. The 50% lethal concentration for third-instar larvae equates to 15.9 ng/ml Cry48Aa and 6.3 ng/ml Cry49Aa of purified toxins, which is a level of toxicity comparable to that of the Bin toxin (13). However, in contrast to the Bin toxin, which is naturally produced in an equimolar ratio, Cry48Aa production is low in native strains and does not confer high toxicity (13). The initial steps of the mode of action of Bin and Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa crystals are similar and comprise the ingestion of crystals, solubilization under alkaline pH, and activation of protoxins into toxins by midgut proteases. After processing, Bin toxin recognizes and binds to specific receptors in the midgut of Bin-toxin-susceptible species through its subunit BinB (51 kDa), while the component BinA (42 kDa) confers toxicity and is likely to form pores in the cell membrane (7, 25). The membrane-bound receptors of Bin toxin on the midgut of Culex quinquefasciatus larvae, Cqm1, were characterized as 60-kDa α-glucosidases (24). The mode of action of Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa is still unknown, but a remarkable feature of this new two-component toxin is the capacity to overcome C. quinquefasciatus resistance to the Bin toxin (13, 19, 21). Resistance of Culex larvae to the Bin-toxin-based larvicides often relies on the absence of functional Cqm1 receptors in the midgut (19, 24, 26). As a consequence, toxins with a distinct mode of action, such as Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa as well as B. thuringiensis serovar israelensis toxins (Cry11Aa, Cry4Aa, Cry4Ba, and Cyt1Aa), do not experience cross-resistance in the Bin-toxin-resistant larvae (12, 21, 32). Such toxins can play a strategic role in the management of resistance, and the major goal of this study was to investigate the ultrastructural effects of the Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa toxin on Bin-toxin-susceptible and -resistant C. quinquefasciatus larvae and to compare these with the effects of a synergistic mixture of Bin/Cry11Aa used to overcome Bin toxin resistance.  相似文献   

3.
Cry11A from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis and Cry11Ba from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. jegathesan were introduced, separately and in combination, into the chromosome of Bacillus sphaericus 2297 by in vivo recombination. Two loci on the B. sphaericus chromosome were chosen as target sites for recombination: the binary toxin locus and the gene encoding the 36-kDa protease that may be responsible for the cleavage of the Mtx protein. Disruption of the protease gene did not increase the larvicidal activity of the recombinant strain against Aedes aegypti and Culex pipiens. Synthesis of the Cry11A and Cry11Ba toxins made the recombinant strains toxic to A. aegypti larvae to which the parental strain was not toxic. The strain containing Cry11Ba was more toxic than strains containing the added Cry11A or both Cry11A and Cry11Ba. The production of the two toxins together with the binary toxin did not significantly increase the toxicity of the recombinant strain to susceptible C. pipiens larvae. However, the production of Cry11A and/or Cry11Ba partially overcame the resistance of C. pipiens SPHAE and Culex quinquefasciatus GeoR to B. sphaericus strain 2297.  相似文献   

4.
5.
球形芽孢杆菌对致倦库蚊的后致死作用   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
研究了球形芽孢杆菌Bacillus sphaericus C3-41菌株对致倦库蚊Culex quinquefasciatus幼虫的毒力及其后致死作用。生物测定表明,该菌株对目标蚊幼虫具有很高的毒力,其丙酮粉剂对3~4龄幼虫48 h的半致死浓度(LC50)为(6.92±0.22) μg/L。用不同亚致死浓度处理2~3龄致倦库蚊幼虫,存活幼虫在后期发育中存在明显的延续死亡和损伤现象,经LC30、LC50、LC70、LC90和LC98剂量的C3.41粉剂处理的致倦库蚊羽化前的总死亡率分别为84%、91%、95%、97%和100%,同时存活的幼虫、蛹和成蚊的发育和行为也受到一定的影响。这种后致死作用随处理浓度的升高而增强,可能同球形芽孢杆菌毒素蛋白对处理期间蚊幼虫中肠上皮细胞造成的损伤相关。  相似文献   

6.
A binary mosquitocidal toxin composed of a three-domain Cry-like toxin (Cry48Aa) and a binary-like toxin (Cry49Aa) was identified in Lysinibacillus sphaericus. Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa has action on Culex quinquefasciatus larvae, in particular, to those that are resistant to the Bin Binary toxin, which is the major insecticidal factor from L. sphaericus-based biolarvicides, indicating that Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa interacts with distinct target sites in the midgut and can overcome Bin toxin resistance. This study aimed to identify Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa ligands in C. quinquefasciatus midgut through binding assays and mass spectrometry. Several proteins, mostly from 50 to 120 kDa, bound to the Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa toxin were revealed by toxin overlay and pull-down assays. These proteins were identified against the C. quinquefasciatus genome and after analysis a set of 49 proteins were selected which includes midgut bound proteins such as aminopeptidases, amylases, alkaline phosphatases in addition to molecules from other classes that can be potentially involved in this toxin's mode of action. Among these, some proteins are orthologs of Cry receptors previously identified in mosquito larvae, as candidate receptors for Cry48Aa/Cry49Aa toxin. Further investigation is needed to evaluate the specificity of their interactions and their possible role as receptors.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract:  In this work, 246 Bacillus sphaericus strains were evaluated against Aedes aegypti and Culex quinquefasciatus larvae to select the most effective ones to be used as the basis of a national product. All strains were isolated from different regions of Brazil and they are stored in a Bacillus spp. collection at Embrapa Genetic Resources and Biotechnology. The selected strains were characterized by biochemical and molecular methods. Based on selective bioassays, 87 strains were identified as toxic to one or both target species. All of these strains contain genes that encode the 42, 51 kDa proteins that constitute the binary toxin and the 100 kDa Mtx1 toxin. All toxic strains presented a very high LC50 against A. aegypti , so, a product based on any of these B. sphaericus strains would not be recommended for use in programmes to control A. aegypti . S201 had highest activity against C. quinquefasciatus , presenting the lowest LC50 and LC90 in bioassays.  相似文献   

8.
Using the shuttle vector pBU4, the mosquitocidal toxin gene mtx1 from Bacillus sphaericus strain SSII-1 was introduced into an acrystalliferous strain of B. thuringiensis both individually and in combination with the accessory protein gene p20 and the cytolytic protein gene cyt1Aa from B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis. Bioassay results indicated that the recombinants B-pMT4(Mtx1) and B-pMT9(Mtx1), both individually containing mtx1, had moderate toxicities to binary toxin susceptible and binary toxin resistant Culex quinquefasciatus larvae during the vegetative growth stage, but that their toxicities declined rapidly during the sporulation phase. The LC50 values were 2.5 and 4.8 mg/ml respectively, against 3-4 instar susceptible and resistant larvae for the final sporulated cultures of recombinants B-pMT9(Mtx1), and little toxicity was detected for B-pMT4(Mtx1). Meanwhile, the recombinant B-pMPX2(Mtx1+Cyt1Aa) expressing Mtx1, P20 alone, and Cyt1Aa in combination had stable toxicities during both the vegetative phase and the sporulation phase, with a LC50 ranging from 0.45-0.58 mg/ml. Furthermore, expression of Cyt1Aa appeared to enhance the activity of Mtx1 to target mosquito larvae, suggesting a synergism between Cyt1Aa and Mtx1 toxins.  相似文献   

9.
A peptide from cadherin AgCad1 of Anopheles gambiae larvae was reported as a synergist of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis Cry4Ba''s toxicity to the Anopheles mosquito (G. Hua, R. Zhang, M. A. Abdullah, and M. J. Adang, Biochemistry 47:5101-5110, 2008). We report that CR11 to the membrane proximal extracellular domain (MPED) (CR11-MPED) and a longer peptide, CR9 to CR11 (CR9-11), from AgCad1 act as synergists of Cry4Ba''s toxicity to Aedes aegypti larvae, but a Diabrotica virgifera virgifera cadherin-based synergist of Cry3 (Y. Park, M. A. F. Abdullah, M. D. Taylor, K. Rahman, and M. J. Adang, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 75:3086-3092, 2009) did not affect Cry4Ba''s toxicity. Peptides CR9-11 and CR11-MPED bound Cry4Ba with high affinity (13 nM and 23 nM, respectively) and inhibited Cry4Ba binding to the larval A. aegypti brush border membrane. The longer CR9-11 fragment was more potent than CR11-MPED in enhancing Cry4Ba against A. aegypti.Mosquitoes are vectors of human and animal infectious diseases. Aedes (Stegomyia) aegypti can transmit viruses that cause dengue fever and yellow fever. Mosquitoes have shown a rapid increase in resistance to various chemical insecticides (16). Nonchemical larvicides based on the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis de Barjac are used to control mosquitoes. The specific toxicity of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis to Anopheles, Culex, and Aedes spp. is due to the protein components of the parasporal crystal (reviewed in reference 9). The Cry4Ba insecticidal protein is one of at least four types of parasporal crystals expressed in B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis. The Cry4Ba insecticidal protein is highly toxic to Anopheles and Aedes larvae but not to Culex larvae (2, 6).Synergists of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis, another strategy to improve the efficacy of Cry4Ba and B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis, would lead to the reduced quantity needed to obtain control, lengthen residual activity, and possibly delay the onset of resistance in target insects (7, 8, 10, 21). In the case of mosquitocidal Cry11Aa, synergistic cytolytic toxin functions as an adventitious receptor, inducing prepore formation and subsequent membrane insertion (20). Recently, a new type of synergist based on peptide fragments of host insect cadherins was shown to enhance Cry1A, Cry3, and Cry4Ba toxicities to lepidopteran, coleopteran, and dipteran larvae, respectively (5, 11, 18, 19). A fragment of the Anopheles gambiae larva midgut cadherin AgCad1 was shown to enhance Cry4Ba against A. gambiae (11). Here we show that the C-terminal cadherin repeat (CR) CR11 to the membrane proximal extracellular domain (MPED) (CR11-MPED) of AgCad1 and another fragment (CR9 to CR11 [CR9-11]) also enhance Cry4Ba against another important mosquito species, A. aegypti.The CR9-11 and CR11-MPED regions of AgCad1 were overexpressed in Escherichia coli according to Chen et al. (5) and tested for the ability to enhance Cry4Ba toxicity to A. aegypti larvae. The CR11-MPED plasmid has been described previously (11), and CR9-11 in pET30a was constructed using the same method, with primers 5′-CGA GCA TAT GGG GTC CCC G TT GCC GAA ATT and 5′-CGC TCT CGA GAA ACA C GA ACG TCA CGC GGT TC. To determine the extent that CR9-11 and CR11-MPED could enhance a low dose of Cry4Ba inclusion body form (IBF), we added increasing amounts of CR9-11 and CR11-MPED IBFs to a Cry4Ba IBF concentration predicted to cause about 35% larval mortality. Bioassays were conducted with fourth-instar A. aegypti larvae as previously described (11). Each treatment was replicated four times, each replicate contained 10 larvae, and larval mortality was recorded after 16 h. The enhancement effect reached a plateau at a 1:25 (Cry4Ba/peptide) mass ratio for both AgCad1 fragments (data not shown). To determine the specificity of the cadherin effect, we included the partial cadherin-like protein WCR8 to WCR10 (WCR8-10) from western corn rootworm Diabrotica virgifera virgifera (18), using a Cry4Ba/WCR8-10 mass ratio of 1:100. The control bioassay using the WCR8-10 cadherin fragment from D. virgifera virgifera showed no synergistic effect with Cry4Ba (data not shown).To assess the relative increase in toxicity when cadherin fragments were present, larvae were fed the Cry4Ba IBF alone or with a fixed 1:25 mass ratio of AgCad1 peptide. The calculated 50% lethal concentration (LC50) of the Cry4Ba IBF was 20.34 ng/ml (16.37 to 25.93 ng/ml) (Table (Table1).1). The addition of CR9-11 and CR11-MPED IBFs to Cry4Ba IBF reduced the Cry4Ba LC50s to 3.43 ng/ml (1.66 to 5.80 ng/ml) and 7.35 (5.94 to 9.07 ng/ml), respectively (Table (Table1);1); furthermore, soluble forms (SF) of CR9-11 and CR11-MPED also reduced the Cry4Ba IBF LC50s, to 5.79 ng/ml (4.42 to 6.73 ng/ml) and 9.23 ng/ml (7.53 to 11.33 ng/ml), respectively (Table (Table1).1). The increased synergistic levels of longer cadherin fragments that are involved with toxin binding were also observed with cadherin fragments from Manduca sexta (3). The use of the SF led to a lower level of enhancement than those of the IBFs of the cadherin peptides. This might be explained by the fact that mosquito larvae are filter feeders; thus, more peptides are ingested if they can be filtered by the mosquito (22).

TABLE 1.

Toxicity of Cry4Ba protoxin IBF alone and in combination with A. gambiae cadherin fragments to fourth-instar larvae of A. aegypti
TreatmenteLC50 (95% CL)aSlope ± SEχ2 test resultRelative toxicityb
Cry4Ba (IBF)c20.34 (16.37-25.93)2.03 ± 0.221.87
Cry4Ba (IBF) + CR11-MPED (IBF)7.35 (5.94-9.07)2.05 ± 0.191.802.76
Cry4Ba (IBF) + CR11-MPED (SF)d9.23 (7.53-11.33)2.17 ± 0.211.912.20
Cry4Ba (IBF) + CR9-11 (IBF)3.43 (1.66-5.80)1.83 ± 0.342.185.93
Cry4Ba (IBF) + CR9-11 (SF)5.79 (4.42-6.73)1.96 ± 0.212.463.51
Open in a separate windowaResults are shown as LC50s (with 95% confidence limits [CL]) and are expressed as nanograms of Cry proteins per ml for bioassays. Mortality values were corrected from the background mortality using Abbott''s formula (1). The LC50s for experimental treatments were calculated using the EPA Probit Analysis Program version 1.5 (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, OH), and the differences in LC50s are considered significantly different if the confidence limits do not overlap.bRelative toxicity was determined by dividing the LC50 of a Cry4Ba protoxin IBF alone with the LC50 of a Cry4Ba protoxin IBF with each A. gambiae cadherin fragment. Production and purification of Cry4BRA (referred to as Cry4Ba) IBFs have been described previously (2).cCry4Ba, CR11-MPED, and CR9-11 IBFs were prepared from recombinant E. coli and suspended in sterilized deionized water. The specific concentration of the target protein, such as toxin or the cadherin peptide, was determined from a Coomassie blue-stained sodium dodecyl sulfate gel by an image analyzer (Alpha Innotech, San Leandro, CA), using bovine serum albumin as the standard.dCR11-MPED and CR9-11 SF were prepared from recombinant E. coli and suspended in distilled water.eEach treatment was run 280 times. All mass ratios for combination treatment are 1:25.The binding affinity between Cry4Ba and CR9-11, CR11-MPED, or WCR8-10 was determined with microtiter plates and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, as described previously (24). Microtiter plates were coated with 1.0 μg Cry4Ba toxin/well. Biotinylated CR9-11 and CR11-MPED (0.001 nM to 100 nM) were used to determine total binding values. As shown in Fig. Fig.1,1, each biotin-labeled cadherin peptide specifically bound Cry4Ba toxin. Using a one-site saturation model, we calculated Kd (dissociation constant) values for cadherin peptide binding to Cry4Ba toxin, as follows: CR9-11 peptide Kd value of 13.3 ± 2.4 nM, CR11-MPED peptide Kd value of 23.2 ± 3.4 nM, and WCR8-10 Kd value of 30.0 ± 6.6 nM. Results from these assays are evidence of a specific and high-affinity interaction between Cry4Ba and the two AgCad1 fragments. However, the high-affinity binding of Cry4Ba to WCR8-10 was unexpected, since the cadherin fragment did not affect Cry4Ba toxicity.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Binding affinity of Cry4Ba to AgCad1 CR9-11, CR11-MPED, and WCR8-10. Ninety-six-well microtiter plates coated with 1 μg of activated Cry4Ba were incubated with increasing concentrations (in nM) of biotinylated CR9-11, CR11-MPED, or WCR8-10. Binding of biotinylated CR9-11, CR11-MPED, or WCR8-10 to Cry4Ba was determined using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay-based binding assay. Bound biotinylated cadherin fragments were detected with a streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase conjugate and substrate. Nonspecific binding was determined in the presence of a 1,000-fold excess of unlabeled homologous CR9-11, CR11-MPED, or WCR8-10. Specific binding was determined by subtracting nonspecific binding levels from total binding levels. Each data point is the mean value based on the results from two experiments done in duplicate. Error bars depict standard errors. Binding affinities (Kd) were calculated based on specifically bound biotinylated cadherin peptides with a one-site saturation binding equation using SigmaPlot version 9 (Systat Software, Inc., San Jose, CA).AgCad1 CR peptides reduce Cry4Ba binding to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV). Using unlabeled cadherin peptides and Cry4Ba toxin as competitors, we performed competition binding experiments using 125I-Cry4Ba and A. aegypti BBMV, as described by Jurat-Fuentes and Adang (13), with slight modifications (24). Samples were used in duplicate, binding experiments were repeated, and the averaged data were used for analysis. Unlabeled Cry4Ba competed against 125I-Cry4Ba binding to BBMV from about 13.5 to 10 pmol toxins bound per μg BBMV (Fig. (Fig.2).2). AgCad1 CR peptides, but not WCR8-10, reduced binding to the same extent and at the same competitor concentrations (in nM) as unlabeled Cry4Ba. Although WCR8-10 binds Cry4Ba with high affinity (Kd = 30 nM), the inability of WCR8-10 to compete against Cry4Ba binding to A. aegypti BBMV suggests that it did not share the same binding sites as the AgCad1 CR peptides. The differences in the binding characteristics of these cadherin fragments could be responsible for the different levels of synergistic effects that were observed.Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.Homologous and heterologous competition binding assays of 125I-Cry4Ba to A. aegypti fourth-instar-larva BBMV by increasing concentrations of unlabeled Cry4Ba, CR9-11, CR11-MPED, or WCR8-10. Bindings are illustrated as pmol amounts of bound labeled proteins per microgram of BBMV. Each data point is a mean value based on the results from two independent experiments using duplicate samples. Standard errors among samples are shown by error bars.How can a cadherin fragment inhibit Cry toxin binding to BBMV yet synergize Cry toxicity to larvae? One explanation is that AgCad1 is not a receptor for Cry4Ba in A. gambiae larvae, as we suggested previously (11), and that its orthologue is not a receptor in A. aegypti. Possibly, AgCad1 is a “null” receptor for Cry4Ba that does not mediate toxicity, and by blocking Cry4Ba binding to cadherin, the toxicity to larvae is increased. The concept of null receptors was proposed to account for Cry1A binding proteins in the midguts of lepidopteran larvae that do not correlate with toxicity (14). Another explanation is that AgCad1 CR peptides bind Cry4Ba, inducing prepore formation and subsequent binding to secondary receptors, similarly to Cry1Ab, which forms a prepore structure that binds aminopeptidase, a secondary receptor in M. sexta (4). Studies show that M. sexta synergist CR12-MPED binds Cry1Ab with high affinity (5) and induces Cry1Ab oligomerization in the presence of midgut proteinases or trypsin (23). Recently, a Helicoverpa armigera cadherin fragment was shown to oligomerize and enhance the toxicity of Cry1Ac (19). The toxin oligomerization step was reported to be necessary for toxicity (12) and was shown to correlate with enhancement activity of toxin-binding cadherin fragments (17). However, the correlation between toxin enhancement and toxin oligomerization was inconsistent, as a toxin-binding cadherin fragment that oligomerizes Cry1Ac was shown to reduce toxicity (15). Further research is necessary to establish the mechanism of AgCad1 CR peptide synergism of Cry4Ba toxicity to A. gambiae (11) and A. aegypti larvae.  相似文献   

10.
Cry11A from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis and Cry11Ba from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. jegathesan were introduced, separately and in combination, into the chromosome of Bacillus sphaericus 2297 by in vivo recombination. Two loci on the B. sphaericus chromosome were chosen as target sites for recombination: the binary toxin locus and the gene encoding the 36-kDa protease that may be responsible for the cleavage of the Mtx protein. Disruption of the protease gene did not increase the larvicidal activity of the recombinant strain against Aedes aegypti and Culex pipiens. Synthesis of the Cry11A and Cry11Ba toxins made the recombinant strains toxic to A. aegypti larvae to which the parental strain was not toxic. The strain containing Cry11Ba was more toxic than strains containing the added Cry11A or both Cry11A and Cry11Ba. The production of the two toxins together with the binary toxin did not significantly increase the toxicity of the recombinant strain to susceptible C. pipiens larvae. However, the production of Cry11A and/or Cry11Ba partially overcame the resistance of C. pipiens SPHAE and Culex quinquefasciatus GeoR to B. sphaericus strain 2297.  相似文献   

11.
Cry4Ba is a delta-endotoxin produced by Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis and Cyt2Aa2 is a cytolytic delta-endotoxin produced by B. thuringiensis subsp. darmstadiensis. Cry4Ba produced in Escherichia coli was toxic to Aedes aegypti larvae (LC(50)=140 ng ml(-1)) but virtually inactive to Culex quinquefasciatus larvae. Cyt2Aa2 expressed in E. coli exhibited moderate activity against A. aegypti and C. quinquefasciatus larvae with LC(50) values of 350 and 250 ng ml(-1), respectively. Co-expression of both toxins in E. coli dramatically increased toxicity to both A. aegypti andC. quinquefasciatus larvae (LC(50)=7 and 20 ng ml(-1), respectively). This is the first report to demonstrate that Cry4Ba and Cyt2Aa2 have high synergistic activity against C. quinquefasciatus larvae.  相似文献   

12.
13.
14.
Mtx1 and Mtx2 are mosquitocidal toxins produced by some strains of Bacillus sphaericus during vegetative phase of growth. Mtx1 from B. sphaericus 2297 shows higher toxicity against Culex quinquefasciatus larvae than to Aedes aegypti larvae whereas Mtx2 from B. sphaericus 2297 shows lower toxicity against C. quinquefasciatus than to A. aegypti larvae. To test synergism of these toxins against A. aegypti larvae, mtx1 and mtx2 genes were cloned into a single plasmid and expressed in Escherichia coli. Cells producing both Mtx1 and Mtx2 toxins exhibited high synergistic activity against A. aegypti larvae approximately 10 times compared to cells expressing only a single toxin. Co-expression of both toxins offers an alternative to improve efficacy of recombinant bacterial insecticides. There is a high possibility to develop these toxins to be used as an environmentally friendly mosquito control agent.  相似文献   

15.
Two field-collected Culex quinquefasciatus colonies were subjected to selection pressure by three strains of Bacillus sphaericus, C3-41, 2362, and IAB59, under laboratory conditions. After 13 and 18 generations of exposure to high concentrations of C3-41 and IAB59, a field-collected low-level-resistant colony developed >144,000- and 46.3-fold resistance to strains C3-41 and IAB59, respectively. A field-collected susceptible colony was selected with 2362 and IAB59 for 46 and 12 generations and attained >162,000- and 5.7-fold resistance to the two agents, respectively. The pattern of resistance evolution in mosquitoes depended on continuous selection pressure, and the stronger the selection pressure, the more quickly resistance developed. The resistant colonies obtained after selection with B. sphaericus C3-41 and 2362 showed very high levels of cross-resistance to B. sphaericus 2362 and C3-41, respectively, but they displayed only low-level cross-resistance to IAB59. On the other hand, the IAB59-selected colonies had high cross-resistance to both strains C3-41 and 2362. Additionally, the slower evolution of resistance against strain IAB59 may be explained by the presence of another larvicidal factor. This is in agreement with the nontoxicity of the cloned and purified binary toxin (Bin1) of IAB59 for 2362-resistant larvae. We also verified that all the B. sphaericus-selected colonies showed no cross-resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis, suggesting that it would be a promising alternative in managing resistance to B. sphaericus in C. quinquefasciatus larvae.  相似文献   

16.
Two field-collected Culex quinquefasciatus colonies were subjected to selection pressure by three strains of Bacillus sphaericus, C3-41, 2362, and IAB59, under laboratory conditions. After 13 and 18 generations of exposure to high concentrations of C3-41 and IAB59, a field-collected low-level-resistant colony developed >144,000- and 46.3-fold resistance to strains C3-41 and IAB59, respectively. A field-collected susceptible colony was selected with 2362 and IAB59 for 46 and 12 generations and attained >162,000- and 5.7-fold resistance to the two agents, respectively. The pattern of resistance evolution in mosquitoes depended on continuous selection pressure, and the stronger the selection pressure, the more quickly resistance developed. The resistant colonies obtained after selection with B. sphaericus C3-41 and 2362 showed very high levels of cross-resistance to B. sphaericus 2362 and C3-41, respectively, but they displayed only low-level cross-resistance to IAB59. On the other hand, the IAB59-selected colonies had high cross-resistance to both strains C3-41 and 2362. Additionally, the slower evolution of resistance against strain IAB59 may be explained by the presence of another larvicidal factor. This is in agreement with the nontoxicity of the cloned and purified binary toxin (Bin1) of IAB59 for 2362-resistant larvae. We also verified that all the B. sphaericus-selected colonies showed no cross-resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis, suggesting that it would be a promising alternative in managing resistance to B. sphaericus in C. quinquefasciatus larvae.  相似文献   

17.
Expression of a chitinase gene, chiAC, from Bacillus thuringiensis in B. sphaericus 2297 using the binary toxin promoter yielded a recombinant strain that was 4,297-fold more toxic than strain 2297 against resistant Culex quinquefasciatus. These results show that this chitinase can synergize the toxicity of the binary toxin against mosquitoes and thus may be useful in managing mosquito resistance to B. sphaericus.  相似文献   

18.
The larval susceptibility to Bacillus sphaericus strain 2362 of the non-man-biting mosquito Culex cinereus and the urban filariasis vector Culex quinquefasciatus, two competitor mosquitoes in polluted habitats, was compared. In the laboratory, both species ingested a similar amount of B. sphaericus spores when fed c. 2 x 10(5) spores per ml for 30 min. However, in the same experiment, third-instar larvae of Cx quinquefasciatus were reduced by 98% at 24 h exposure while Cx cinereus larvae were only reduced by 6% at 72 h. In the field, preimaginal populations of Cx cinereus ingested, within a week, more than 99% of the applied spores, but showed no significant decrease through 14 days in cesspools treated at 10 g/m2 of a flowable concentrate of B. sphaericus 2362, containing 2 x 10(10) spores/g. It is proposed that specific biological control of Cx quinquefasciatus could result from appropriate treatment of breeding-sites with larvicidal B. sphaericus and competitive displacement by Cx cinereus or other mosquitoes with larvae that are more tolerant of B. sphaericus.  相似文献   

19.
Insecticides based on Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis have been used for mosquito and blackfly control for more than 20 years, yet no resistance to this bacterium has been reported. Moreover, in contrast to B. thuringiensis subspecies toxic to coleopteran or lepidopteran larvae, only low levels of resistance to B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis have been obtained in laboratory experiments where mosquito larvae were placed under heavy selection pressure for more than 30 generations. Selection of Culex quinquefasciatus with mutants of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis that contained different combinations of its Cry proteins and Cyt1Aa suggested that the latter protein delayed resistance. This hypothesis, however, has not been tested experimentally. Here we report experiments in which separate C. quinquefasciatus populations were selected for 20 generations to recombinant strains of B. thuringiensis that produced either Cyt1Aa, Cry11Aa, or a 1:3 mixture of these strains. At the end of selection, the resistance ratio was 1,237 in the Cry11Aa-selected population and 242 in the Cyt1Aa-selected population. The resistance ratio, however, was only 8 in the population selected with the 1:3 ratio of Cyt1Aa and Cry11Aa strains. When the resistant mosquito strain developed by selection to the Cyt1Aa-Cry11Aa combination was assayed against Cry11Aa after 48 generations, resistance to this protein was 9.3-fold. This indicates that in the presence of Cyt1Aa, resistance to Cry11Aa evolved, but at a much lower rate than when Cyt1Aa was absent. These results indicate that Cyt1Aa is the principal factor responsible for delaying the evolution and expression of resistance to mosquitocidal Cry proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Insecticides based on Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis have been used for mosquito and blackfly control for more than 20 years, yet no resistance to this bacterium has been reported. Moreover, in contrast to B. thuringiensis subspecies toxic to coleopteran or lepidopteran larvae, only low levels of resistance to B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis have been obtained in laboratory experiments where mosquito larvae were placed under heavy selection pressure for more than 30 generations. Selection of Culex quinquefasciatus with mutants of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis that contained different combinations of its Cry proteins and Cyt1Aa suggested that the latter protein delayed resistance. This hypothesis, however, has not been tested experimentally. Here we report experiments in which separate C. quinquefasciatus populations were selected for 20 generations to recombinant strains of B. thuringiensis that produced either Cyt1Aa, Cry11Aa, or a 1:3 mixture of these strains. At the end of selection, the resistance ratio was 1,237 in the Cry11Aa-selected population and 242 in the Cyt1Aa-selected population. The resistance ratio, however, was only 8 in the population selected with the 1:3 ratio of Cyt1Aa and Cry11Aa strains. When the resistant mosquito strain developed by selection to the Cyt1Aa-Cry11Aa combination was assayed against Cry11Aa after 48 generations, resistance to this protein was 9.3-fold. This indicates that in the presence of Cyt1Aa, resistance to Cry11Aa evolved, but at a much lower rate than when Cyt1Aa was absent. These results indicate that Cyt1Aa is the principal factor responsible for delaying the evolution and expression of resistance to mosquitocidal Cry proteins.  相似文献   

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