| Literature DB >> 30134885 |
Arinder K Arora1,2, Kendra N Pesko3, Verónica Quintero-Hernández4,5, Lourival D Possani4, Thomas A Miller6, Ravi V Durvasula7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Arthropod-borne diseases remain a leading cause of human morbidity and mortality and exact an enormous toll on global agriculture. The practice of insecticide-based control is fraught with issues of excessive cost, human and environmental toxicity, unwanted impact on beneficial insects and selection of resistant insects. Efforts to modulate insects to eliminate pathogen transmission have gained some traction and remain future options for disease control.Entities:
Keywords: Homalodisca vitripennis; Pantoea agglomerans; Paratransgenesis; Xylella fastidiosa
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30134885 PMCID: PMC6104007 DOI: 10.1186/s12896-018-0460-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Fig. 1Toxicity of melittin and SLM against P.agglomerans and X. fastidiosa. 105–106 CFUs of P. agglomerans and X. fastidiosa were treated with each AMP. O.D. 600 was measured 24 h after treatment of P. agglomerans with each AMP. Given the slow growth rate of X. fastidiosa, this organism was cultured 24 h after treatment with each AMP and CFUs were counted. P. agglomerans O.D.600 after treatment with - (a) melittin, c SLM; X. fastidiosa CFUs counts after treating with - (b) melittin, d SLM. Both melittin and SLM exerted greater toxicity toward X. fastidiosa than P. agglomerans. All values in each graph are combined results from two independent experiments
Fig. 2a Western blot showing secretion and accumulation of melittin and SLM conjugated to HlyA secretion signal by transformed P. agglomerans lines in spent media. Spent media from transformed P. agglomerans lines were concentrated using Micron 10 kDa filters. Concentrated spent medium was tested using an anti-E-tag antibody. Lane 1: ladder; lane 2: Wild type P. agglomerans; lane 3: HlyA secretion signal only; lane 4: melittin conjugated to HlyA secretion signal; lane 5: SLM conjugated to HlyA secretion signal. b, c Western blots showing secretion and accumulation of melittin and SLM conjugated to HlyA secretion signal by transformed P. agglomerans lines in the GWSS gut. Extracts from homogenized GWSSs were tested for presence of AMPs using an anti-E-tag antibody. b Lane 1: ladder; lane 2: GWSS fed on P. agglomerans expressing melittin conjugated to HlyA secretion signal; lane 3: GWSS fed on wild type P. agglomerans (c) Lane 1: ladder; lane 2: GWSS fed on P. agglomerans expressing SLM; lane 3: GWSS fed on wild type P. agglomerans. Five insects were tested individually for accumulation of SLM and melittin, and two insects were found positive for presence of both AMPs
Fig. 3Graphs showing a decrease in X. fastidiosa acquisition by paratransgenic GWSSs. P. agglomerans was painted on grape stems after mixing with guar gum. PA(WT) - wild type P. agglomerans; PA(HlyA) - P. agglomerans expressing HlyA secretion signal only; PA(Melittin) - P. agglomerans expressing melittin conjugated to HlyA; PA(SLM) - P. agglomerans expressing SLM conjugated to HlyA. The GWSSs were allowed to feed on Pantoea-painted plants for 48 h before putting them in a cage containing X. fastidiosa-infected plants for 48 h. Subsequently the GWSSs were collected and two GWSSs were caged per single naive grape plant for 24 h. These GWSSs were surface sterilized and X. fastidiosa presence was assayed using rt-PCR. a X. fastidiosa CFUs per insect head; b Percent of GWSSs carrying X. fastidiosa. These are pooled results from two independent experiments
Fig. 4Decrease in X. fastidiosa transmission to grape plants by paratransgenic GWSSs. P. agglomerans were painted on grape stems after mixing with guar gum. PA(WT) - wild type P. agglomerans; PA(HlyA) - P. agglomerans expressing HlyA secretion signal only; PA(Melittin) - P. agglomerans expressing melittin conjugated to HlyA; PA(SLM) - P. agglomerans expressing SLM conjugated to HlyA. The GWSSs were allowed to acquire P. agglomerans from P. agglomerans-painted plants for 48 h before an acquisition access period of 48 h on X. fastidiosa-infected grape plants. Subsequently the GWSSs were collected and two GWSSs were then confined per naive grape plant. After 24 h of inoculation access, the insects were removed and the plants were kept in a greenhouse for 30 weeks before testing them for presence of X. fastidiosa using rt-PCR. GWSSs that acquired P. agglomerans expressing HlyA secretion signal, melittin conjugated to HlyA secretion signal and SLM conjugated to HlyA secretion signal did not transmit X. fastidiosa. These are pooled results from two independent experiments