| Literature DB >> 26830331 |
Ensi Shao1,2, Li Lin1, Chen Chen1, Hanze Chen1, Haohan Zhuang1, Songqing Wu1, Li Sha1, Xiong Guan1, Zhipeng Huang1.
Abstract
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) Cry toxins have been used widely in pest managements. However, Cry toxins are not effective against sap-sucking insects (Hemiptera), which limits the application of Bt for pest management. In order to extend the insecticidal spectrum of Bt toxins to the rice brown planthopper (BPH), Nilaparvata lugens, we modified Cry1Ab putative receptor binding domains with selected BPH gut-binding peptides (GBPs). Three surface exposed loops in the domain II of Cry1Ab were replaced with two GBPs (P2S and P1Z) respectively. Bioassay results showed that toxicity of modified toxin L2-P2S increased significantly (~9 folds) against BPH nymphs. In addition, damage of midgut cells was observed from the nymphs fed with L2-P2S. Our results indicate that modifying Cry toxins based on the toxin-gut interactions can broaden the insecticidal spectrum of Bt toxin. This method provides another approach for the development of transgenic crops with novel insecticidal activity against hemipteran insects and insect populations resistant to current Bt transgenic crops.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26830331 PMCID: PMC4735585 DOI: 10.1038/srep20106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1In vitro binding assay of P1Z and P2S with BPH BBMV.
Showing binding activity of P1Z-GFP and P2S-GFP to the BPH BBMV. Only P1Z-GFP and P2S-GFP bound strongly to the BPH BBMV, while only a very faint signal was observed from either UNBP-GFP-BBMV or GFP-BBMV (negative control).
Figure 2In vitro proteolytic processing of modified Cry proteins by BPH gut proteases.
Processed Cry1Ab fragments were detected by western blot with a rabbit polyclonal Cry1Ab serum as the primary antibody and anti-rabbit-IgG conjugated to HRP as the secondary antibody. Cry1Ab protoxins processed by trypsin and without processing were used as positive and negative controls, respectively.
Susceptibility of BPH and DBM to modified Cry protein.
| Cry toxins | BPH | DBM | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LC50 (95% CI, μg/mL) | Slope | Χ2 ( | LC50 (95% CI, μg/mL) | Slope | Χ2 ( | |
| Cry1Ab | 189.83 (156.58–247.74) | 1.51 (±0.38) | 1.263 (3, 0.738) | 0.88 (0.74–1.02) | 2.00 (±0.40) | 6.934 (4, 0.139) |
| L1-P2S | 37.82 (30.20–46.38) | 1.01 (±0.24) | 2.117 (3, 0.549) | 5.89 (3.98–8.37) | 1.82 (±0.43) | 7.091 (4, 0.131) |
| L2-P2S | 21.54 (17.83–25.31) | 1.59 (±0.27) | 2.926 (3, 0.403) | 30.48 (23.98–40.92) | 1.47 (±0.32) | 5.023 (4, 0.285) |
| L3-P2S | 37.47 (19.82–61.20) | 1.10 (±0.26) | 7.181 (3, 0.066) | 13.72 (11.16–16.75) | 1.80 (±0.39) | 3.887 (4, 0.422) |
| L1-P1Z | 137.77 (116.63–169.43) | 1.52 (±0.39) | 3.995 (3, 0.262) | 6.84 (5.63–8.21) | 2.19 (±0.31) | 4.019 (4, 0.403) |
| L2-P1Z | 77.45 (56.20–112.59) | 1.61 (±0.35) | 5.908 (3, 0.116) | 33.39 (27.32–42.97) | 1.63 (±0.24) | 6.076 (4, 0.194) |
| L3-P1Z | 231.72 (182.03–330.95) | 1.36 (±0.57) | 4.506 (3, 0.212) | 18.05 (14.68–22.33) | 1.94 (±0.46) | 4.905 (4, 0.297) |
CI, confidence interval.
LC50, 50% lethal concentration the LC50 value and their 95% fiducial limits were assessed by Probit analysis using SPSS (version 22.0.0) and the online statistical tools (http://www.xuru.org/st/DS.asp).
Mortatlity of BPHS nymphs fed with high concentration of BSA.
| Concentration of BSA (μg/mL) | Mortality (±SE) |
|---|---|
| 100 | 12% (±3%) |
| 200 | 13% (±4%) |
| 300 | 13% (±2%) |
Figure 3Observation of the damaged gut epithelial cells of BPH after ingestion of L2-P2S toxin.
Gut samples from treatments in bioassay were prepared into ultrastructure samples for observation by transmission electron microscope. Panels (A–D) indicate ultrastructure of BPH gut epithelial cells ingested with L2-P2S (lysis cells were pointed by arrows). Panels (E,F) indicate ultrastructure of BPH gut epithelial cells ingested with Cry1Ab or PBS only respectively. Mv: microvilli; N: nucleus; Pm: peritropic matrix; L: lumen.
Primers to replace three loops in domain II of Cry1Ab by P1Z or P2S respectively.
| Primer | Nucleotide sequence |
|---|---|
| MF-F | 5′- |
| MF-R | 5′- |
| P2Sloop1-R | 5′-gcacgccgcctgcgacgacatcaaacaATGAGCATCCGTATAGATGGT-3′ |
| P2Sloop1-F | 5′-tgtttgatgtcgtcgcaggcggcgtgcGAATATTATTGGTCAGGGCA-3′ |
| P2Sloop2-R | 5′-gcacgccgcctgcgacgacatcaaacaATATAAAGTGGACGATAATGTTCTA-3′ |
| P2Sloop2-F | 5′-tgtttgatgtcgtcgcaggcggcgtgcCAACTATCTGTTCTTGACGGG-3′ |
| P2Sloop3-R | 5′-gcacgccgcctgcgacgacatcaaacaAACATGGCTTAATCGATGACTA-3′ |
| P2Sloop3-F | 5′-tgtttgatgtcgtcgcaggcggcgtgcATAATAAGAGCTCCTATGTTCTCTT-3′ |
| P1Zloop1-R | 5′-gcactgtggaagtcggggaaggtgacaATGAGCATCCGTATAGATGGT-3′ |
| P1Zloop1-F | 5′-tgtcaccttccccgacttccacagtgcGAATATTATTGGTCAGGGCA-3′ |
| P1Zloop2-R | 5′-gcactgtggaagtcggggaaggtgacaATATAAAGTGGACGATAATGTTCTA-3′ |
| P1Zloop2-F | 5′-tgtcaccttccccgacttccacagtgcCAACTATCTGTTCTTGACGGG-3′ |
| P1Zloop3-R | 5′-gcactgtggaagtcggggaaggtgacaAACATGGCTTAATCGATGACTA-3′ |
| P1Zloop3-F | 5′-tgtcaccttccccgacttccacagtgcATAATAAGAGCTCCTATGTTCTCTT-3′ |
Enzyme site Spe I and Mun I is underlined and lower case text indicating nucleotide sequence of peptide P1Z and P2S.