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1.
After repetitive injections of moderate doses of ecdysone, ecdysterone or phenobarbital to young Vth (last) instar larvae of Locusta migratoria, the conversion rate of ecdysone to ecdysterone in vivo is significantly higher than in control insects. Similarly, 5 hr after injection of a low dose of ecdysone or ecdysterone, a strong ‘induction’ of ecdysone 20-monooxygenase activity occurs. This ‘inductive’ effect is blocked by cycloheximide.Simultaneous injections of ecdysone and ecdysterone show that hydroxylation of ecdysone is inhibited by the product of the reaction, ecdysterone. Removal of the prothoracic glands and X-ray treatment of the hemocytopoietic tissue do not affect ecdysone hydroxylation. The mechanism of induction and inhibition of ecdysone 20-monooxygenase shown in this study is probably responsible for the important variations of this key enzyme which have been reported from several insect species.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the distribution, toxicity, morphology, and protein profiles of Bacillus thuringiensis isolates from forests in Korea to isolate naturally occurring novel B. thuringiensis. A total of 170 B. thuringiensis isolates were obtained from 832 samples producing spore and parasporal inclusion bodies. In toxicity tests for lepidopteran, dipteran, and coleopteran insects, 57.6% isolates were toxic only to Lepidoptera, 5.3% were toxic only to Diptera, and 24.1% were toxic to both Diptera and Lepidoptera. The remaining collections (13.0%) were not toxic to the tested insects. The shapes of the parasporal crystals produced in B. thuringiensis isolates were bipyramidal, spherical, ovoid, or irregular. As their toxicities varied with parasporal crystal shape, B. thuringiensis isolates possessing bipyramidal or irregular parasporal crystals were largely toxic to lepidopteran species whereas those producing spherical parasporal crystals were mainly toxic to dipteran species. B. thuringiensis toxic to both dipteran and lepidopteran insects contained 130- and 70-kDa parasporal crystals, whereas B. thuringiensis toxic to lepidopteran insects expressed 130-kDa parasporal crystals. The results suggest that forest areas in Korea are a rich source of B. thuringiensis and need to be further explored to discover novel B. thuringiensis isolates.  相似文献   

3.
Bacillus thuringiensis is the most effective microbial control agent for controlling numerous species from different insect orders. The main threat for the long term use of B. thuringiensis in pest control is the ability of insects to develop resistance. Thus, the identification of insect genes involved in conferring resistance is of paramount importance. A colony of Spodoptera exigua (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) was selected for 15 years in the laboratory for resistance to Xentari™, a B. thuringiensis-based insecticide, reaching a final resistance level of greater than 1,000-fold. Around 600 midgut ESTs were analyzed by DNA-macroarray in order to find differences in midgut gene expression between susceptible and resistant insects. Among the differentially expressed genes, repat and arylphorin were identified and their increased expression was correlated with B. thuringiensis resistance. We also found overlap among genes that were constitutively over-expressed in resistant insects with genes that were up-regulated in susceptible insects after exposure to Xentari™, suggesting a permanent activation of the response to Xentari™ in resistant insects. Increased aminopeptidase activity in the lumen of resistant insects in the absence of exposure to Xentari™ corroborated the hypothesis of permanent activation of response genes. Increase in midgut proliferation has been proposed as a mechanism of response to pathogens in the adult from several insect species. Analysis of S. exigua larvae revealed that midgut proliferation was neither increased in resistant insects nor induced by exposure of susceptible larvae to Xentari™, suggesting that mechanisms other than midgut proliferation are involved in the response to B. thuringiensis by S. exigua larvae.  相似文献   

4.
Bacillus thuringiensis is an important source of insect resistance traits in commercial crops. In an effort to prolong B. thuringiensis trait durability, insect resistance management programs often include combinations of insecticidal proteins that are not cross resistant or have demonstrable differences in their site of action as a means to mitigate the development of resistant insect populations. In this report, we describe the activity spectrum of a novel B. thuringiensis Cry protein, Cry1Bh1, against several lepidopteran pests, including laboratory-selected B. thuringiensis-resistant strains of Ostrinia nubilalis and Heliothis virescens and progeny of field-evolved B. thuringiensis-resistant strains of Plutella xylostella and Spodoptera frugiperda. Cry1Bh1 is active against susceptible and B. thuringiensis-resistant colonies of O. nubilalis, P. xylostella, and H. virescens in laboratory diet-based assays, implying a lack of cross-resistance in these insects. However, Cry1Bh1 is not active against susceptible or Cry1F-resistant S. frugiperda. Further, Cry1Bh1 does not compete with Cry1Fa or Cry1Ab for O. nubilalis midgut brush border membrane binding sites. Cry1Bh1-expressing corn, while not completely resistant to insect damage, provided significantly better leaf protection against Cry1Fa-resistant O. nubilalis than did Cry1Fa-expressing hybrid corn. The lack of cross-resistance with Cry1Ab and Cry1Fa along with independent membrane binding sites in O. nubilalis makes Cry1Bh1 a candidate to further optimize for in-plant resistance to this pest.  相似文献   

5.
The use of Bacillus thuringiensis as a biopesticide is a viable alternative for insect control since the insecticidal Cry proteins produced by these bacteria are highly specific; harmless to humans, vertebrates, and plants; and completely biodegradable. In addition to Cry proteins, B. thuringiensis produces a number of extracellular compounds, including S-layer proteins (SLP), that contribute to virulence. The S layer is an ordered structure representing a proteinaceous paracrystalline array which completely covers the surfaces of many pathogenic bacteria. In this work, we report the identification of an S-layer protein by the screening of B. thuringiensis strains for activity against the coleopteran pest Epilachna varivestis (Mexican bean beetle; Coleoptera: Coccinellidae). We screened two B. thuringiensis strain collections containing unidentified Cry proteins and also strains isolated from dead insects. Some of the B. thuringiensis strains assayed against E. varivestis showed moderate toxicity. However, a B. thuringiensis strain (GP1) that was isolated from a dead insect showed a remarkably high insecticidal activity. The parasporal crystal produced by the GP1 strain was purified and shown to have insecticidal activity against E. varivestis but not against the lepidopteran Manduca sexta or Spodoptera frugiperda or against the dipteran Aedes aegypti. The gene encoding this protein was cloned and sequenced. It corresponded to an S-layer protein highly similar to previously described SLP in Bacillus anthracis (EA1) and Bacillus licheniformis (OlpA). The phylogenetic relationships among SLP from different bacteria showed that these proteins from Bacillus cereus, Bacillus sphaericus, B. anthracis, B. licheniformis, and B. thuringiensis are arranged in the same main group, suggesting similar origins. This is the first report that demonstrates that an S-layer protein is directly involved in toxicity to a coleopteran pest.  相似文献   

6.
Plasmid transfer between Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki HD1 and B. thuringiensis subsp. tenebrionis donor strains and a streptomycin-resistant B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki recipient was studied under environmentally relevant laboratory conditions in vitro, in soil, and in insects. Plasmid transfer was detected in vitro at temperatures of 5 to 37°C, at pH 5.9 to 9.0, and at water activities of 0.965 to 0.995, and the highest transfer ratios (up to 10−1 transconjugant/donor) were detected within 4 h. In contrast, no plasmid transfer was detected in nonsterile soil, and rapid formation of spores by the introduced strains probably contributed most to the lack of plasmid transfer observed. When a B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki strain was used as the donor strain, plasmid transfer was detected in killed susceptible lepidopteran insect (Lacanobia oleracea) larvae but not in the nonsusceptible coleopteran insect Phaedon chocleriae. When a B. thuringiensis subsp. tenerbrionis strain was used as the donor strain, no plasmid transfer was detected in either of these insects even when they were killed. These results show that in larger susceptible lepidopteran insects there is a greater opportunity for growth of B. thuringiensis strains, and this finding, combined with decreased competition due to a low initial background bacterial population, can provide suitable conditions for efficient plasmid transfer in the environment.  相似文献   

7.
Applications to combat non-lepidopteran insects are not as common as applications against lepidopteran insects. The aim of the present work was to isolate and identify Bacillus thuringiensis isolates from soil samples using five approaches, viz., analysis of crystal protein production by microscopy; detection of cry gene content by PCR, SDS-PAGE profiling; cloning and sequencing; phylogenetic analysis; and toxicity testing. Two hundred soil samples were used for isolation of B. thuringiensis and a total of 69 putative isolates of B. thuringiensis that produce parasporal crystalline inclusions were isolated from 5,267 Bacillus-like colonies. A bipyramidal inclusion was predominant in 32.2 % of the B. thuringiensis isolates compared to other shapes. Crystal protein profiling of B. thuringiensis isolates by SDS-PAGE analysis showed the presence of bands of 130, 73, 34, 25 and 13 kDa, among which 50–60 kDa bands were present abundantly. PCR analysis revealed the predominance of Coleopteran-active cry genes in these isolates. Variation in nucleotide sequences, crystal morphology and mass of crystal protein(s) purified from the isolates of B. thuringiensis revealed genetic and molecular diversity. Four strains containing Coleopteran-active cry genes showed higher toxicity against Myllocerus undecimpustulatus undatus Marshall (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) adults when compared with B. thuringiensis subsp. morrisoni pathovar tenebrionis. These results are useful in emphasizing the distribution of cry genes and for prognostication of toxicity, and may contribute to the identification of novel candidate genes for bioengineered crop protection.  相似文献   

8.
Identification of the resistance mechanism of insects against Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1A toxin is becoming an increasingly challenging task. This fact highlights the need for establishing new methods to further explore the molecular interactions of Cry1A toxin with insects and the receptor-binding region of Cry1A toxins for their wider application as biopesticides and a gene source for gene-modified crops. In this contribution, a quantum dot-based near-infrared fluorescence imaging method has been applied for direct dynamic tracking of the specific binding of Cry1A toxins, CrylAa and CrylAc, to the midgut tissue of silkworm. The in vitro fluorescence imaging displayed the higher binding specificity of CrylAa–QD probes compared to CrylAc–QD to the brush border membrane vesicles of midgut from silkworm. The in vivo imaging demonstrated that more CrylAa–QDs binding to silkworm midgut could be effectively and distinctly monitored in living silkworms. Furthermore, frozen section analysis clearly indicated the broader receptor-binding region of Cry1Aa compared to that of Cry1Ac in the midgut part. These observations suggest that the insecticidal activity of Cry toxins may depend on the receptor-binding sites, and this scatheless and visual near-infrared fluorescence imaging could provide a new avenue to study the resistance mechanism to maintain the insecticidal activity of B. thuringiensis toxins.  相似文献   

9.
Bacillus thuringiensis and Bacillus cereus belong to the B. cereus species group. The two species share substantial chromosomal similarity and differ mostly in their plasmid content. The phylogenetic relationship between these species remains a matter of debate. There is genetic exchange both within and between these species, and current evidence indicates that insects are a particularly suitable environment for the growth of and genetic exchange between these species. We investigated the conjugation efficiency of B. thuringiensis var. kurstaki KT0 (pHT73-EmR) as a donor and a B. thuringiensis and several B. cereus strains as recipients; we used one-recipient and two-recipient conjugal transfer systems in vitro (broth and filter) and in Bombyx mori larvae, and assessed multiplication following conjugation between Bacillus strains. The B. thuringiensis KT0 strain did not show preference for genetic exchange with the B. thuringiensis recipient strain over that with the B. cereus recipient strains. However, B. thuringiensis strains germinated and multiplied more efficiently than B. cereus strains in insect larvae and only B. thuringiensis maintained complete spore germination for at least 24 h in B. mori larvae. These findings show that there is no positive association between bacterial multiplication efficiency and conjugation ability in infected insects for the used strains.  相似文献   

10.
The Bacillus cereus group comprises a range of micro-organisms with diverse habits, including gut commensals, opportunistic pathogens and soil saprophytes. Using quantitative microbiological methods we tested whether Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) could reproduce in cadavers of Plutella xylostella killed by Bt, or in the gut of live insects, or be transmitted vertically from females to their offspring. We also tested whether diverse Bt strains could grow in high nutrient broth at a pH similar to that in the larval midgut. Low levels of reproduction were found in insect cadavers but there was no evidence of vertical transmission, or of significant reproduction in live insects. Four strains of B. thuringiensis var. kurstaki and one of B. thuringiensis var. tenebrionis were found to be capable of growth at high pH. Greater spore recovery rates in frass were found in hosts that were resistant or tolerant of infection. We concluded that that spores recovered in frass represent, in general, an ungerminated fraction of ingested inoculum and that germination rates are reduced in unsuitable hosts.  相似文献   

11.
Insecticides based on crystalline toxins of Bacillus thuringiensis are very good biological plant protection products. However, the spectrum of activity of some toxins is narrow or resistance among insects has been developed. We tested the insecticidal activity of crystals of the B. thuringiensis MPU B9 strain alone and supplemented with Vip3Aa proteins against important pests: Spodoptera exigua Hübner (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), Cydia pomonella L. (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) and Dendrolimus pini L. (Lepidoptera: Lasiocampidae). The Cry toxins were more active for D. pini but less active against S. exigua and C. pomonella than Vip3Aa. Supplementation of Cry toxins by small amounts of vegetative insecticidal proteins demonstrated synergistic effect and significantly enhanced the toxicity of the insecticide. The results indicate the utility of Cry and Vip3Aa toxins mixtures to control populations of crops and forests insect pests.  相似文献   

12.
The distribution of Bacillus thuringiensis in Egyptian soils of cotton cultivations represented by 11 governorates was studied. This study aimed to isolate indigenous strains that may be potent against some lepidopterous insect pests. Out of 45 isolates, only 10 were effective and they showed high levels of toxicity against the target insects at 500 μg/ml (80% larval mortality or higher). Among these 10 isolates, two isolates were potent against Spodoptera littoralis, two isolates were potent against Helicoverpa (= Heliothis) armigera, seven isolates were potent against Pectinophora gossypiella, but none were potent against Agrotis ypsilon. LC50 and LC90 values and the potency of the B. thuringiensis isolates have been determined. Trials were conducted to isolate B. thuringiensis from diseased lepidopterous insects collected from the same locations, but all isolates showed low potential activity against the target insects. These findings showed promise for the possible use of some indigenous B. thuringiensis strains in the control of lepidopterous pests in Egypt.  相似文献   

13.
In the past decade, the phenomenon of immune priming was documented in many invertebrates in a large number of studies; however, in most of these studies, behavioral evidence was used to identify the immune priming. The underlying mechanism and the degree of specificity of the priming response remain unclear. We studied the mechanism of immune priming in the larvae of the silkworm, Bombyx mori, and analyzed the specificity of the priming response using two closely related Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria (Photorhabdus luminescens TT01 and P. luminescens H06) and one Gram-positive pathogenic bacterium (Bacillus thuringiensis HD-1). Primed with heat-killed bacteria, the B. mori larvae were more likely to survive subsequent homologous exposure (the identical bacteria used in the priming and in the subsequent challenge) than heterologous (different bacteria used in the priming and subsequent exposure) exposure to live bacteria. This result indicated that the B. mori larvae possessed a strong immune priming response and revealed a degree of specificity to TT01, H06 and HD-1 bacteria. The degree of enhanced immune protection was positively correlated with the level of phagocytic ability of the granular cells and the antibacterial activity of the cell-free hemolymph. Moreover, the granular cells of the immune-primed larvae increased the phagocytosis of a previously encountered bacterial strain compared with other bacteria. Thus, the enhanced immune protection of the B. mori larvae after priming was mediated by the phagocytic ability of the granular cells and the antibacterial activity of the hemolymph; the specificity of the priming response was primarily attributed to the phagocytosis of bacteria by the granular cells.  相似文献   

14.

Objectives

To develop a recombinant strain of Bacillus thuringiensis that synthesizes two bacteriocins that enhance the antibacterial potency of the strain and that could have applied clinical and industrial value.

Results

We cloned the thurincin H cluster into the pHT3101 vector by assembling two genetic cassettes harboring genes for the synthesis, modification, immunity and transport of thurincin H. This construct was used to transform a thurincin H-sensitive strain of B. thuringiensis that synthesizes the kenyacin 404 to generate the recombinant Btk 404/pThurH which was immune to thurincin H and produces bacteriocins of approximately 3 kDa. A significant increase in the inhibitory activity, respectively, ~?40 and 300%, was observed when compared with parental Btm 269 and Btk 404. Btk 404/pThurH showed increased activity against ten Gram-positive bacteria, including B. cereus, Listeria monocytogenes and B. pseudomycoides, and the Gram-negative bacterium, Sphingobacterium cabi. However, an antagonistic effect against Vibrio parahaemolyticus, relative to native strains, was observed.

Conclusions

We have generated a recombinant strain of B. thuringiensis that co-synthesizes two bacteriocins (kenyacin 404, thurincin H) with improved inhibitory activity, when compared with parental strains. To our knowledge, this is the first study that shows that B. thuringiensis could be manipulated to produce two bacteriocins, one being of heterologous origin, that enhance the antibacterial activity of the recombinant strain.
  相似文献   

15.
Bacterial antagonists used as biocontrol agents represent part of an integrated management program to reduce pesticides in the environment. Bacillus thuringiensis is considered a good alternative as a biocontrol agent for suppressing plant pathogens such as Fusarium. In this study, we used microscopy, flow cytometry, indirect immunofluorescence, and high performance liquid chromatography to determine the interaction between B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki LFB-FIOCRUZ (CCGB) 257 and F. verticillioides MRC 826, an important plant pathogen frequently associated with maize. B. thuringiensis showed a strong in vitro suppressive effect on F. verticillioides growth and inhibited fumonisin production. Flow cytometry analysis was found to be adequate for characterizing the fungal cell oscillations and death during these interactions. Further studies of the antagonistic effect of this isolate against other fungi and in vivo testing are necessary to determine the efficacy of B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki in controlling plant pathogens. This is the first report on the use of flow cytometry for quantifying living and apoptotic F. verticillioides cells and the B. thuringiensis Cry 1Ab toxin.  相似文献   

16.
Cry2Aa, one of the major insecticidal proteins produced by Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki HD1, is known to be active against both lepidopteran and dipteran larvae. In order to determine whether Cry2Aa could enhance or synergize the mosquitocidal activity of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis, we constructed a plasmid vector that harbored the cry2Aa operon and transformed crystalliferous and acrystalliferous strains of this bacterium. The wild-type B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis, a recombinant B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis producing Cry2A along with its native major mosquitocidal proteins, and a recombinant B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis producing Cry2Aa alone were tested against three major mosquito species — Aedes aegypti, Anopheles gambiae and Culex quinquefasciatus. Our results demonstrated that Cry2Aa does not synergize or enhance the mosquitocidal activity of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis against these important vectors of disease.  相似文献   

17.
It was recently proposed that gut bacteria are required for the insecticidal activity of the Bacillus thuringiensis-based insecticide, DiPel, toward the lepidopterans Manduca sexta, Pieris rapae, Vanessa cardui, and Lymantria dispar. Using a similar methodology, it was found that gut bacteria were not required for the toxicity of DiPel or Cry1Ac or for the synergism of an otherwise sublethal concentration of Cry1Ac toward M. sexta. The toxicities of DiPel and of B. thuringiensis HD73 Cry spore/Cry1Ac synergism were attenuated by continuously exposing larvae to antibiotics before bioassays. Attenuation could be eliminated by exposing larvae to antibiotics only during the first instar without altering larval sterility. Prior antibiotic exposure did not attenuate Cry1Ac toxicity. The presence of enterococci in larval guts slowed mortality resulting from DiPel exposure and halved Cry1Ac toxicity but had little effect on B. thuringiensis HD73 Cry spore/Cry1Ac synergism. B. thuringiensis Cry cells killed larvae after intrahemocoelic inoculation of M. sexta, Galleria mellonella, and Spodoptera litura and grew rapidly in plasma from M. sexta, S. litura, and Tenebrio molitor. These findings suggest that gut bacteria are not required for B. thuringiensis insecticidal activity toward M. sexta but that B. thuringiensis lethality is reduced in larvae that are continuously exposed to antibiotics before bioassay.Bacillus thuringiensis has long been regarded as a bona fide entomopathogen that can produce an array of virulence factors including insecticidal parasporal crystal (Cry) toxins, vegetative insecticidal proteins, phospholipases, immune inhibitors, and antibiotics (31). B. thuringiensis establishes lethal infections in many insect species after intrahemocoelic inoculation (9, 10, 14, 26, 31), and the insecticidal activity of Cry toxins, which lyse the intestinal epithelium, can be synergized by the presence of viable B. thuringiensis spores (31). In each instance, synergism has been attributed to hemocoelic infection by B. thuringiensis.A novel hypothesis (6, 7) proposed that B. thuringiensis is incapable of killing Lymantria dispar, Manduca sexta, Pieris rapae, or Vanessa cardui in the absence of gut bacteria. Prior exposure of L. dispar larvae to a combination of four antibiotics severely reduced the subsequent toxicity of the B. thuringiensis-based (spores and Cry toxins) bioinsecticide, DiPel (Valent BioSciences) (6). Both larval susceptibility to B. thuringiensis and the number of culturable gut bacteria were found to be negatively correlated with the concentration of antibiotics to which larvae were previously exposed. Furthermore, a total reduction in larval susceptibility was coincident with the elimination of any detectable gut bacteria. Experimental reinfection with Enterobacter sp. strain NAB3, found in the guts of some populations of L. dispar larvae, was found to rescue the toxicity of B. thuringiensis, whereas reinfection with Enterococcus casseliflavus and Staphylococcus xylosus did not. It was also shown that while Escherichia coli, Enterobacter sp. strain NAB3, and B. thuringiensis could all grow in tryptic soy broth, B. thuringiensis alone could not grow in filter-sterilized plasma from L. dispar larvae. Finally, it was shown that the toxicity of Cry1Aa-expressing E. coli JM103 to L. dispar larvae was reduced by the prior exposure of larvae to antibiotics and could be eliminated when E. coli was also heat killed before use. It was concluded that B. thuringiensis-induced mortality results from a mixed infection of the hemocoel that must include bacteria capable of growth within the L. dispar larval hemolymph (6).Using the same methods, it was subsequently reported that prior exposure of Vanessa cardui, M. sexta, Pieris rapae, and Heliothis virescens larvae to antibiotics eliminated culturable bacteria and rendered larvae resistant to DiPel (7). Experimental reinfection of larvae with Enterobacter sp. strain NAB3 rescued DiPel toxicity in V. cardui, M. sexta, and P. rapae but not in H. virescens larvae. Using a continuous-exposure bioassay, the susceptibility of Pectinophora gossypiella to the Cry1Ac-based bioinsecticide MVPII was found to be increased by prior exposure to antibiotics. Toxicity from a 48-h exposure of L. dispar larvae to MVPII was reduced, but not eliminated, by prior antibiotic exposure and could be rescued by reinfection with Enterobacter sp. strain NAB3. It was concluded that “enteric bacteria have important roles in B. thuringiensis-induced killing of Lepidoptera across a range of taxonomy, feeding breadth, and relative susceptibility to B. thuringiensis” (7).The present work shows that gut bacteria are not required for the insecticidal activity of B. thuringiensis or Cry1Ac toxin toward M. sexta but that prior antibiotic exposure reduces larval susceptibility to B. thuringiensis.  相似文献   

18.
Bacillus thuringiensis is a Gram positive bacterium that is used for the production of biopesticides. The toxic action of different strains and serovars ofB. thuringiensis can be extremely selective towards specific pests, or, in contrast, it can affect a wide variety of non-target organisms such as insects, vertebrates or humans. A reliable characterization of the cultivated strains is of primary importance for the biopesticide industry, in order to assess the contamination of the final product with strains with different pesticide actions or that might be dangerous for human health. The aim of this study was to develop useful methods for the typing of differentB. thuringiensis strains using two PCR-based methods, RAPD and Rep-PCR with BOXA1R and ERIC2 primers. The molecular fingerprints obtained using ERIC2-PCR showed a reliable ability to discriminateBacillus thuringiensis strains.  相似文献   

19.
A microdisc technique is described for the administration of a predetermined dose of the crystalline endotoxin of Bacillus thuringiensis to host insects allowed to feed freely. It combines a high degree of precision with ease of execution and allows the elimination of insects that fail to ingest the full dose.The technique was used to compare the potencies of eight varieties of B. thuringiensis in fifth-instar larvae of Pieris brassicae. The varieties thuringiensis, morrisoni, entomocidus, and galleriae all showed similar toxicities, variety tolworthi was one-third and aizawai one-twentieth as toxic, while the varieties alesti and sotto were too weakly toxic to allow their potencies to be accurately determined.Preliminary tests with the same varieties on larvae of Bombyx mori indicated an entirely different order of potencies, in which entomocidus, sotto, alesti, galleriae, and aizawai were the most toxic and tolworthi and thuringiensis the least.  相似文献   

20.
Despite the fact that around 200 cry genes from Bacillus thuringiensis have already been cloned, only a few Cry proteins are toxic towards a given pest. A crucial step in the mode of action of Cry proteins is binding to specific sites in the midgut of susceptible insects. Binding studies in insects that have developed cross-resistance discourage the combined use of Cry proteins sharing the same binding site. If resistance management strategies are to be implemented, the arsenal of Cry proteins suitable to control a given pest may be not so vast as it might seem at first. The present study evaluates the potential of B. thuringiensis for the control of a new pest, the geranium bronze (Cacyreus marshalli Butler), a butterfly that is threatening the popularity of geraniums in Spain. Eleven of the most common Cry proteins from the three lepidopteran-active Cry families (Cry1, Cry2, and Cry9) were tested against the geranium bronze for their toxicity and binding site relationships. Using 125I-labeled Cry1A proteins we found that, of the seven most active Cry proteins, six competed for binding to the same site. For the long-term control of the geranium bronze with B. thuringiensis-based insecticides it would be advisable to combine any of the Cry proteins sharing the binding site (preferably Cry1Ab, since it is the most toxic) with those not competing for the same site. Cry1Ba would be the best choice of these proteins, since it is significantly more toxic than the others not binding to the common site.  相似文献   

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