Use of Proteases to Improve the Insecticidal Activity of Baculoviruses |
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Authors: | Robert L. Harrison Bryony C. Bonning |
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Affiliation: | Department of Entomology and Interdepartmental Genetics Program, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, 50011 |
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Abstract: | Basement membranes that surround the tissues of lepidopterous larvae act as potential barriers to baculovirus movement and establishment of systemic infection. Hence, one potential approach to improving the insecticidal activity of baculoviruses is to perforate or eliminate the basement membranes of their hosts, thereby facilitating the process of infection. Toward this end, we constructed six recombinant clones of Autographa californica nucleopolyhedrovirus (AcMNPV) that express three proteases that digest basement membrane proteins: rat stromelysin-1, human gelatinase A, and flesh fly (Sarcophaga peregrina) cathepsin L. Expression of these proteases was directed from either the ie-1 promoter (in AcIE1TV3.STR1, AcIE1TV3.GEL, and AcIE1TV3.ScathL) or the p6.9 promoter (in AcMLF9.STR1, AcMLF9.GEL, and AcMLF9.ScathL). Recombinant proteases were detected in the culture medium of cells infected with recombinant viruses by either zymography or azocoll assay. AcMLF9.STR1 and AcMLF9.ScathL caused premature cuticular melanization of 5th instar Heliothis virescens. Melanization and fragmentation of internal tissues were observed in half of the larvae infected with AcMLF9.ScathL and not at all in larvae infected with AcMLF9.STR1 or wild-type AcMNPV. Lethal-concentration bioassays revealed no significant differences in virulence toward H. virescens among the protease-expressing recombinants and wild-type AcMNPV. However, in survival-time bioassays, AcMLF9.ScathL killed H. virescens approximately 30% faster than AcMLF9.LqhIT2, a virus expressing an insect-selective scorpion neurotoxin from the p6.9 promoter. Larvae infected with AcMLF9.ScathL consumed approximately 26-fold less lettuce than wild-type virus-infected larvae. These results highlight the potential of improving baculovirus efficacy through the expression of proteases. |
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Keywords: | Autographa californica multicapsid nucleopolyhedrovirus Heliothis virescens tobacco budworm Sarcophaga peregrina flesh fly matrix metalloproteases stromelysin-1 gelatinase A cathepsin L scorpion toxins |
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