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J. Bacteriol., 05 1995, 2851-2857, Vol 177, No. 10
E Ben-Dov, S Boussiba and A Zaritsky
The genes cryIVA and cryIVD, encoding 134- and 72-kDa proteins,
respectively, and the gene for a regulatory 20-kDa polypeptide of Bacillus
thuringiensis subsp. israelensis (serovar H14) were cloned in all seven
possible combinations by the Escherichia coli expression vectors pT7 and
pUHE. The four combinations containing cryIVA (cryIVA alone, with cryIVD,
with the 20-kDa-protein gene, and with both) displayed high levels of
mosquito larvicidal activity in pUHE. The toxicity of the combination of
cryIVA and cryIVD, with or without the 20-kDa-protein gene, was higher than
has ever been achieved with delta- endotoxin genes in recombinant E. coli.
Fifty percent lethal concentrations against third-instar Aedes aegypti
larvae for these clones decreased (i.e., toxicity increased) continuously
to about 3 x 10(5) cells ml-1 after 4 h of induction. Larvicidal
activities, obtained after 30 min of induction, were lower for clones in
pT7 and decreased for an additional 3.5 h. Induction of either cryIVD or
the 20- kDa-protein gene alone resulted in no larvicidal activity in either
pT7 or pUHE20. Cloned together, these genes were slightly toxic in pT7 but
not in pUHE20. Five minutes of induction of this combination (cryIVD with
the 20-kDa-protein gene) in pT7 yielded a maximal mortality of about 40%,
which decreased rapidly and disappeared completely after 50 min. CryIVD is
thus apparently degraded in E. coli and partially stabilized by the 20-kDa
regulatory protein. Larvicidal activity of the combination of cryIVA and
cryIVD was sevenfold higher than that of cryIVA alone, probably because of
the cross-stabilization of the polypeptides or the synergism between their
activities.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Mosquito larvicidal activity of Escherichia coli with combinations of genes from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis [published erratum appears in J Bacteriol 1995 Nov;177(21):6319]
Department of Life Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Be'er- Sheva, Israel.
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