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1.
A gut juice protein from Choristoneura fumiferana (spruce budworm) larvae that precipitates certain δ-endotoxins shows a unique specificity for the C-terminal amino acid sequence. Using homolog scanning mutants, we have identified a contiguous region of the Cry1Aa toxin which interacts with the 75-kDa toxin precipitating protein (TPP-75)1 resulting in precipitation. The contiguous region from Cry1Aa can be transferred to Cry1Ac and results in an identical precipitation reaction. The precipitation reaction occurs rapidly and is unique in that the ratio of precipitating protein to toxin is low (estimated at 0.01), unlike antibody–antigen reactions which exhibit mole ratios close to 1. TPP-75 has been characterized as an elastase-like serine protease. We have taken advantage of this serine protease character and incorporated a radiolabel using an irreversible inhibitor. The radiolabel has allowed us to show the coincidence of the catalytically-inhibited TPP-75 with the toxin in a blotting assay and to follow the degradation of TPP-75 during storage. TPP-75 represents the first evidence that gut juice proteins may selectively attenuate the activity of δ-endotoxins, prior to binding to putative receptors on susceptible cells. TPP-75 should be evaluated as a possible resistance mechanism for those larvae that do not exhibit a receptor-based resistance.  相似文献   

2.
The Cry9Ca1 toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis was significantly more toxic to spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana) than the Cry1Ab6, Cry1Ba1, Cry1Ca2, Cry1Da1, Cry1Ea1, and Cry1Fa2 toxins. It displayed high activity against silkworm (Bombyx mori) but was not toxic to black army cutworm (Actebia fennica) or gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar). The Cry9Ca1 is the most effective spruce budworm toxin known to date and may offer promise for control and resistance management of that species.  相似文献   

3.
Zhang C  Xia L  Ding X  Huang F  Li H  Sun Y  Yin J 《Current microbiology》2011,62(3):968-973
Domain III of Bacillus thuringiensis Cry δ-endotoxins are considered to be related to the stability of the structure and avoidance of overdigestion by proteases. In this study, some residues of potential chymotrypsin and trypsin sites in Domain III of B. thuringiensis Cry1Aa were replaced individually with alanine by site-directed mutagenesis, in order to investigate their functional roles. Except F574A, all mutants F536A, R543A, F550A, F565A, R566A, F570A, F576A, F583A, and F590A were highly expressed the 130 kD protoxins at levels comparable to the wild-type tested by SDS-PAGE. In bioassays, F536A, R566A, and F590A increased toxicity against Spodoptera exigua Hüner larve by 20, 40, and 40%, respectively, as compared to the wild-type. F536A and F565A showed an increase of 6 and 10% in toxicity against Heliothis armigera Hubner than the wild-type. Toxicities of some mutants were altered greatly, and the same mutants were shown to have different toxicities against those two insects. Structural analyses showed that mutants R543A, F574A, F576A-affecting insecticidal activity might be relational to structural stability of toxin or decreased affinity for receptor binding. These results indicated that those residues were involved in the larvicidal activity of the Cry1Aa toxin.  相似文献   

4.
Three proteolytic enzymes, trypsin, chymotrypsin, and aminopeptidase-N (APN), were purified from laboratory-reared western spruce budworm, Choristoneura occidentalis [Freeman], larvae. Budworm trypsin exhibited a high degree of substrate specificity, was inactivated by DFP and TLCK, and was inhibited by trypsin inhibitors. The western spruce budworm chymotrypsin hydrolyzed SAAPFpNA and SAAPLpNA, but not SFpNA, SGGFpNA, SGGLpNA or BTpNA. The chymotrypsin was inactivated by DFP, and was inhibited by chymostatin and the chymotrypsin inhibitor, POT-1. Purified budworm chymotrypsin exhibited little BTEE esterolytic activity and was insensitive to inhibition with TPCK. The N-terminal sequence of budworm trypsin, chymotrypsin, and APN were obtained. Similar levels of trypsin and APN gut activities were found in laboratory-reared and field-collected larvae. However, in comparison to laboratory-reared insects, considerably less chymotrypsin activity, and a much higher level of gut carboxypeptidase activity were found in field-collected western spruce budworm larvae.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1Ac toxin is 100 times less toxic than Cry1C to Mamestra brassicae. An R(423)S mutation abolishes Cry1Ac toxin proteolysis in M. brassicae gut juice but does not increase its toxicity to this insect. The CryAAC hybrid toxin (1Ac/1Ac/1Ca) is toxic to M. brassicae but is susceptible to gut protease digestion at the R(423) residue. Accordingly we have investigated the effect of the R(423)S mutation in CryAAC on its toxicity for M. brassicae and Pieris brassicae. Bioassays demonstrated that the R(423)S mutation slightly increased the toxicity of CryAAC for M. brassicae by having a significantly inhibitory effect on the growth of surviving larvae. The mutant hybrid was still highly toxic to P. brassicae. Features of CryAACR(423)S such as, (1) stability in M. brassicae gut juice and (2) crystal solubility were investigated. Computer simulations suggest that a possible major increase in flexibility in the CryAAC loop beta7/beta8 (G(391)-P(397)) caused by the R(423)S substitution could be a reason for the increase in M. brassicae toxicity.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
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   

9.
Widespread commercial use of Bacillus thuringiensis Cry toxins to control pest insects has increased the likelihood for development of insect resistance to this entomopathogen. In this study, we investigated protease activity profiles and toxin-binding capacities in the midgut of a strain of Colorado potato beetle (CPB) that has developed resistance to the Cry3Aa toxin of B. thuringiensis subsp. tenebrionis. Histological examination revealed that the structural integrity of the midgut tissue in the toxin-resistant (R) insect was retained whereas the same tissue was devastated by toxin action in the susceptible (S) strain. Function-based activity profiling using zymographic gels showed specific proteolytic bands present in midgut extracts and brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) of the R strain not apparent in the S strain. Aminopeptidase activity associated with insect midgut was higher in the R strain than in the S strain. Enzymatic processing of toxin did not differ in either strain and, apparently, is not a factor in resistance. BBMV from the R strain bound approximately 60% less toxin than BBMV from the S strain, whereas the kinetics of toxin saturation of BBMV was 30 times less in the R strain than in the S strain. However, homologous competition inhibition binding of (125)I-Cry3Aa to BBMV did not reveal any differences in binding affinity (K(d) approximately 0.1 microM) between the S and R strains. The results indicate that resistance by the CPB to the Cry3Aa toxin correlates with specific alterations in protease activity in the midgut as well as with decreased toxin binding. We believe that these features reflect adaptive responses that render the insect refractory to toxin action, making this insect an ideal model to study host innate responses and adaptive changes brought on by bacterial toxin interaction.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Cry1Ia and Cry1Aa proteins exhibited toxicities against Prays oleae with LC50 of 189 and 116 ng/cm2, respectively. The ability to process Cry1Ia11 protoxin by trypsin, chymotrypsin and P. oleae larvae proteases was studied and compared to that of Cry1Aa11. After solubilization under high alkaline condition (50 mM NaOH), Cry1Aa11 was converted into a major fragment of 65 kDa, whereas Cry1Ia11 protoxin was completely degraded by P. oleae larvae proteases and trypsin and converted into a major fragment of 70 kDa by chymotrypsin. Using less proteases of P. oleae juice, the degradation of Cry1Ia11 was attenuated. When the solubilization (in 50 mM Na2CO3 pH 10.5 buffer) and activation were combined, Cry1Ia11 was converted into a proteolytic product of 70 kDa after 3 h of incubation with trypsin, chymotrypsin and P. oleae juice. These results suggest that the in vivo solubilization of Cry1Ia11 was assured by larval proteases after a swelling of the corresponding inclusion due to the alkalinity of the larval midgut.  相似文献   

12.
Two strains of the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.), were selected using Cry1C protoxin and transgenic broccoli plants expressing a Cry1C toxin of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt). Both strains were resistant to Cry1C but had different cross-resistance patterns. We used 12 Bt protoxins for cross-resistance tests, including Cry1Aa, Cry1Ab, Cry1Ac, Cry1Bb, Cry1C, Cry1D, Cry1E, Cry1F, Cry1J, Cry2Ab, Cry9Aa, and Cry9C. Compared with the unselected sister strain (BCS), the resistance ratio (BR) of one strain (BCS-Cry1C-1) to the Cry1C protoxin was 1,090-fold with high level of cross-resistance to Cry1Aa, Cry1Ab, Cry1Ac, Cry1F, and Cry1J (RR > 390-fold). The cross-resistance to Cry1A, Cry1F, and Cry1J in this strain was probably related to the Cry1A resistance gene(s) that came from the initial field population and was caused by intensive sprayings of Bt products containing Cry1A protoxins. The neonates of this strain can survive on transgenic broccoli plants expressing either Cry1Ac or Cry1C toxins. The other strain (BCS-Cry1C-2) was highly resistant to Cry1C but not cross-resistant to other Bt protoxins. The neonates of this strain can survive on transgenic broccoli expressing Cry1C toxin but not Cry1Ac toxin. The gene(s) conferring resistance to Cry1C segregates independently from Cry1Ac resistance in these strains. The toxicity of Cry1E and Cry2Ab protoxins was low to all of the three strains. The overall progress of all work has resulted in a unique model system to test the stacked genes strategy for resistance management of Bt transgenic crops.  相似文献   

13.
The interactions among white spruce, Picea glauca (Moench) Voss, purified acetone tannin extracts (hydrolyzable and condensed tannin), Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki Cry1A(c) delta-endotoxin strain HD-73 (Btk), and spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana (Clemens) (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) on larval survival, growth, and development were investigated over the whole larval feeding period by using artificial diet supplemented with three concentrations of Btk toxins per milliliter of diet (0, 0.021, and 1.72 microg/ml) and three concentrations of foliar tannin extract (0, 8, and 15% dry mass basis). At high Btk concentration, tannin antagonized Btk potency against spruce budworm by lowering Btk-related larval mortality from 83 to 43%. At moderate Btk concentration tannin did not affect Btk potency. Host tree tannins antagonized not only the lethal effects of Btk toxin but also sublethal Btk-related impacts in terms of larval development, pupal weight, relative consumption rate, and growth rate. When alone in the diet, tannin negatively affected larval survival, growth, and development. Maximum potency of tannins against spruce budworm larvae (60% mortality) was reached at dietary concentrations corresponding to what is found in the plant (8% dry mass). The addition of Btk toxin in food containing tannin reduced percentage of larval mortality by one-third, indicating that Btk toxin can antagonize tannin potency against the insect. Development of Btk transgenic spruce trees should consider the antagonistic effect the toxin may have on the resistance conferred by tannins that have evolved naturally in spruce trees.  相似文献   

14.
One strategy for delaying evolution of resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis crystal (Cry) endotoxins is the production of multiple Cry toxins in each transgenic plant (gene stacking). This strategy relies upon the assumption that simultaneous evolution of resistance to toxins that have different modes of action will be difficult for insect pests. In B. thuringiensis-transgenic (Bt) cotton, production of both Cry1Ac and Cry2Ab has been proposed to delay resistance of Heliothis virescens (tobacco budworm). After previous laboratory selection with Cry1Ac, H. virescens strains CXC and KCBhyb developed high levels of cross-resistance not only to toxins similar to Cry1Ac but also to Cry2Aa. We studied the role of toxin binding alteration in resistance and cross-resistance with the CXC and KCBhyb strains. In toxin binding experiments, Cry1A and Cry2Aa toxins bound to brush border membrane vesicles from CXC, but binding of Cry1Aa was reduced for the KCBhyb strain compared to susceptible insects. Since Cry1Aa and Cry2Aa do not share binding proteins in H. virescens, our results suggest occurrence of at least two mechanisms of resistance in KCBhyb insects, one of them related to reduction of Cry1Aa toxin binding. Cry1Ac bound irreversibly to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) from YDK, CXC, and KCBhyb larvae, suggesting that Cry1Ac insertion was unaffected. These results highlight the genetic potential of H. virescens to become resistant to distinct Cry toxins simultaneously and may question the effectiveness of gene stacking in delaying evolution of resistance.  相似文献   

15.
16.
One strategy for delaying evolution of resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis crystal (Cry) endotoxins is the production of multiple Cry toxins in each transgenic plant (gene stacking). This strategy relies upon the assumption that simultaneous evolution of resistance to toxins that have different modes of action will be difficult for insect pests. In B. thuringiensis-transgenic (Bt) cotton, production of both Cry1Ac and Cry2Ab has been proposed to delay resistance of Heliothis virescens (tobacco budworm). After previous laboratory selection with Cry1Ac, H. virescens strains CXC and KCBhyb developed high levels of cross-resistance not only to toxins similar to Cry1Ac but also to Cry2Aa. We studied the role of toxin binding alteration in resistance and cross-resistance with the CXC and KCBhyb strains. In toxin binding experiments, Cry1A and Cry2Aa toxins bound to brush border membrane vesicles from CXC, but binding of Cry1Aa was reduced for the KCBhyb strain compared to susceptible insects. Since Cry1Aa and Cry2Aa do not share binding proteins in H. virescens, our results suggest occurrence of at least two mechanisms of resistance in KCBhyb insects, one of them related to reduction of Cry1Aa toxin binding. Cry1Ac bound irreversibly to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) from YDK, CXC, and KCBhyb larvae, suggesting that Cry1Ac insertion was unaffected. These results highlight the genetic potential of H. virescens to become resistant to distinct Cry toxins simultaneously and may question the effectiveness of gene stacking in delaying evolution of resistance.  相似文献   

17.
A genetically altered variant of Cry9Ca from Bacillus thuringiensis shows high potency against the spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana Clemens. Its activity, as measured by feeding inhibition in frass-failure assays, is estimated to be four to seven times greater than B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki HD-1, the strain currently used in commercial products to control this insect. Bioassays against budworm of mixtures of the modified Cry9Ca and two of the Cry1A endotoxin proteins produced by HD-1 show neither synergism nor antagonism. Experiments with brush border membrane vesicles from budworm midgut revealed that Cry9Ca and the Cry1A toxins share a common binding site and that bound Cry9Ca can be displaced from the membrane to some extent by the Cry1A toxins. However, it is uncertain whether the binding site is actually the receptor molecule or a membrane protein associated with pore formation.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Commercial enzymes and insect gut juice at various concentrations were used to digest Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. sotto Cry1Aa protoxin and examine the fragmentation pattern and effect on insecticidal activity. Trypsin at both high (5 mg/mL) and low (0.05 mg/mL) concentrations converted protoxin to toxin with no difference in insecticidal activity against Bombyx mori larvae. In both cases, the toxin protein had an apparent M(r) of 58.4 kDa (SDS-PAGE). Active toxin of identical M(r) was also produced with low concentrations of Pronase and subtilisin, but at high concentration, it was degraded into two protease-resistant fragments of apparent M(r) 31.8 and 29.6 kDa, and exhibited no insecticidal activity. Sequencing data established the primary cleavage site to be in domain II, the receptor-binding region of the toxin, in an exposed loop between two beta-sheet strands. Fragmentation was not observed, however, when the digests were analyzed by native protein techniques, but rather the toxin molecule appeared to be intact. The amount of activated toxin produced by Choristoneura fumiferana gut juice was markedly reduced when the gut-juice concentration was increased from 1 to 50% and correlated with a loss in insecticidal activity. However, no lower M(r) protease-resistant fragments were evident in the SDS-PAGE of these digests.  相似文献   

20.
Helix α4 of Bacillus thuringiensis Cry toxins is thought to play a critical role in the toxins' mode of action. Accordingly, single-site substitutions of many Cry1Aa helix α4 amino acid residues have previously been shown to cause substantial reductions in the protein's pore-forming activity. Changes in protein structure and formation of intermolecular disulfide bonds were investigated as possible factors responsible for the inactivity of these mutants. Incubation of each mutant with trypsin and chymotrypsin for 12 h did not reveal overt structural differences with Cry1Aa, although circular dichroism was slightly decreased in the 190- to 210-nm region for the I132C, S139C, and V150C mutants. The addition of dithiothreitol stimulated pore formation by the E128C, I132C, S139C, T142C, I145C, P146C, and V150C mutants. However, in the presence of these mutants, the membrane permeability never reached that measured for Cry1Aa, indicating that the formation of disulfide bridges could only partially explain their loss of activity. The ability of a number of inactive mutants to compete with wild-type Cry1Aa for pore formation in brush border membrane vesicles isolated from Manduca sexta was also investigated with an osmotic swelling assay. With the exception of the L147C mutant, all mutants tested could inhibit the formation of pores by Cry1Aa, indicating that they retained receptor binding ability. These results strongly suggest that helix α4 is involved mainly in the postbinding steps of pore formation.  相似文献   

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