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GENETICS AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY

Plasmid-Located Pathogenicity Determinants of Serratia entomophila, the Causal Agent of Amber Disease of Grass Grub, Show Similarity to the Insecticidal Toxins of Photorhabdus luminescens

Mark R. H. Hurst, Travis R. Glare, Trevor A. Jackson, Clive W. Ronson
Mark R. H. Hurst
Biocontrol and Biosecurity, Grasslands Division, AgResearch, Lincoln, and
Department of Microbiology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
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Travis R. Glare
Biocontrol and Biosecurity, Grasslands Division, AgResearch, Lincoln, and
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Trevor A. Jackson
Biocontrol and Biosecurity, Grasslands Division, AgResearch, Lincoln, and
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Clive W. Ronson
Department of Microbiology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
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DOI: 10.1128/JB.182.18.5127-5138.2000
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ABSTRACT

Serratia entomophila and Serratia proteamaculans cause amber disease in the grass grubCostelytra zealandica (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae), an important pasture pest in New Zealand. Larval disease symptoms include cessation of feeding, clearance of the gut, amber coloration, and eventual death. A 115-kb plasmid, pADAP, identified in S. entomophila is required for disease causation and, when introduced into Escherichia coli, enables that organism to cause amber disease. A 23-kb fragment of pADAP that conferred disease-causing ability on E. coli and a pADAP-cured strain of S. entomophila was isolated. Using insertion mutagenesis, the pathogenicity determinants were mapped to a 17-kb region of the clone. Sequence analysis of the 17-kb region showed that the predicted products of three of the open reading frames (sepA, sepB, and sepC) showed significant sequence similarity to components of the insecticidal toxin produced by the bacterium Photorhabdus luminescens. Transposon insertions in sepA, sepB, orsepC completely abolished both gut clearance and cessation of feeding on the 23-kb clone; when recombined back into pADAP, they abolished gut clearance but not cessation of feeding. These results suggest that SepA, SepB, and SepC together are sufficient for amber disease causation by S. entomophila and that another locus also able to exert a cessation-of-feeding effect is encoded elsewhere on pADAP.

  • Copyright © 2000 American Society for Microbiology
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Plasmid-Located Pathogenicity Determinants of Serratia entomophila, the Causal Agent of Amber Disease of Grass Grub, Show Similarity to the Insecticidal Toxins of Photorhabdus luminescens
Mark R. H. Hurst, Travis R. Glare, Trevor A. Jackson, Clive W. Ronson
Journal of Bacteriology Sep 2000, 182 (18) 5127-5138; DOI: 10.1128/JB.182.18.5127-5138.2000

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Plasmid-Located Pathogenicity Determinants of Serratia entomophila, the Causal Agent of Amber Disease of Grass Grub, Show Similarity to the Insecticidal Toxins of Photorhabdus luminescens
Mark R. H. Hurst, Travis R. Glare, Trevor A. Jackson, Clive W. Ronson
Journal of Bacteriology Sep 2000, 182 (18) 5127-5138; DOI: 10.1128/JB.182.18.5127-5138.2000
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KEYWORDS

Bacterial Toxins
Coleoptera
Insecticides
Photorhabdus
plasmids
Serratia

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