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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2005, p. 2558-2563, Vol. 71, No. 5
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.5.2558-2563.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, RMB 944 Calala Lane, Tamworth, NSW, Australia 2340,1 New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Locked Bag 11, Windsor, NSW, Australia 2756,2 Reading University, Whiteknights, Reading, Berks, United Kingdom,3 Child Health Research Institute, King William Road, North Adelaide, SA, Australia 5006,4 Rothamsted Research, Harpenden AL5 2JQ, United Kingdom5
Received 27 August 2004/ Accepted 9 December 2004
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B. thuringiensis toxins are ingested by the insect as protoxins, which are then activated by midgut proteases to form a crystal capable of disrupting the midgut membrane wall, leading to insect death. Transgenic cotton varieties coding for expression of the B. thuringiensis delta-endotoxin Cry1Ac (Ingard) have been grown in Australia to control H. armigera since 1996, and a two-gene variety, Bollgard II, coding for both Cry1Ac and Cry2Ab toxins, was commercially released in late 2003. The continuous expression of B. thuringiensis toxins in transgenic cotton presents an enduring threat of resistance selection, a risk increased in Australian cotton by variable Cry1Ac expression (9). Resistance monitoring of H. armigera field populations from Australia and the People's Republic of China has suggested that there has been some decline in the susceptibility to Cry1Ac in the field (4, 11). In 2001, an H. armigera strain (silver strain) was formed from field survivors of the Cry1Ac resistance monitoring program (4) from New South Wales and Queensland cotton areas. Due to inadequate bioassay methods, there has been some disagreement among Australian researchers as to the resistance status of the silver strain. In this work we optimized the bioassay protocol and increased the availability of the Cry1Ac toxin to H. armigera larvae, and we obtained unequivocal evidence that this H. armigera strain, bred from field survivors of a Cry1Ac resistance screening procedure, is resistant to Cry1Ac. A class of serine hydrolases, called nonspecific esterases, which are found in the insect gut, have been implicated as an insecticide resistance mechanism in numerous insect pests due to their ability to hydrolyze insecticidal esters and their ability to sequester xenobiotics. In Australia, H. armigera resistance to insecticide groups as diverse as pyrethroids and chlorfenapyr has been linked these enzymes (5, 6). In this work, we investigated the possibility that such an esterase mechanism confers resistance to B. thuringiensis toxins, and innovative surface plasmon resonance (SPR) using BIAcore and other biochemical techniques were employed to study H. armigera esterase interactions with Cry1Ac.
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Five Cry1Ac-susceptible H. armigera field strains collected from conventional cotton and maize crops in 2002, which been exposed to a wide variety of conventional insecticides, were also used for comparison of esterase activity in this study (strain 1, Warren, New South Wales; strain 2, Narromine, New South Wales; strain 3, Gunnedah; strain 4, Griffith, New South Wales; and strain 5, Willow Tree, New South Wales).
Diet incorporation bioassay.
Feeding bioassays with third-instar larvae were used, in which Cry1Ac was incorporated into an artificial diet. Formulated Cry1Ac (MVP) was serially diluted with distilled water containing 0.1% Triton X-100 and pipetted onto the diet surface. Larvae were confined to the B. thuringiensis-treated diet at 25°C for 4 days before they were transferred to a fresh, non-B. thuringiensis-treated diet. Mortality was assessed 14 days after Cry1Ac dosage. Dosage mortality data were analyzed by probit analysis (3). We bioassayed the silver strain and a lab susceptible strain, but since the silver strain had been maintained unselected for some time, to better gauge the magnitude of resistance, the silver strain was selected once with MVP at the 50% lethal concentration (LC50), and the F1 progeny (silver selected strain) were bioassayed. The "silver selected" strain was also reciprocally backcrossed with the susceptible strain (silver selected females x susceptible males; silver selected males x susceptible females), and progeny were bioassayed with MVP.
Feeding bioassays with cotton leaves.
First-instar larvae of the susceptible and "silver selected" strains were placed on cotton leaf disks of non-B. thuringiensis (Sicot 189), Ingard (Sicot 189i), and Bollgard II (Sicot 289b) cotton varieties. The Ingard and Bollgard II cotton varieties expressed Cry1Ac toxin at a rate of 1.2 to 1.4 ppm. The larvae were sealed in vented, air-tight, polystyrene, 5-cm-diameter petri dishes (five larvae per petri dish). The larvae were allowed to feed on the cotton leaf disks at 25°C. Each experiment was replicated eight times. Additional leaf material was provided if required, and mortality was assessed at 10 days. Surviving larvae were kept on the artificial diet until pupation and then until eclosion to verify normal development, fertility, and fecundity into the next generation.
Electrophoresis.
The polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis preparation methods were similar to those used by Devonshire and Moores (2). Larvae (3 to 4 mg) were homogenized in microtiter plates with 200 µl of 1.6% Triton X-100 in distilled water containing 10% sucrose and a few grains of bromocresol purple. Aliquots (10 µl) were loaded directly onto a polyacrylamide gel. Gels were run at 250 V and maximum current until the solvent front had run off the gel. The gels were stained for esterase activity in a solution of 0.1 mM 1-naphthyl acetate-0.2% Fast Blue RR salt in phosphate buffer (pH 6.0) for 30 min in the dark at 25°C and fixed in 5% acetic acid.
Total-esterase determinations.
Small (3- to 4-mg) larvae were used for total-esterase determinations. Fifty larvae of each strain were homogenized in 2.5 ml of 0.02 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) containing 0.05% Triton X-100. Replicate aliquots (10 µl) were transferred to a clean microplate containing 240 µl of 0.2 M phosphate buffer (pH 6.0) with 0.6% Fast Blue RR salt and 1.86% 1-naphthyl acetate. Kinetic assays were immediately performed with a Bio-Rad microplate reader utilizing kinetic software, and absorbance readings (450 nm) were taken automatically at 14-s intervals. The kinetic velocity was calculated by the online computer as the slope of the fitted regression line using an absorbance limit of 2,000 mOD/(optical density x 103).
In vivo esterase determinations.
The in vivo esterase determination method (7) was as follows. First-instar susceptible and "silver selected" larvae were fed a Cry1Ac-treated diet (0.0012 mg Cry1Ac/0.5 g diet) or Cry1Ac-expressing Ingard cotton leaves at 25°C. At times from 30 min to 70 h later, samples of larvae were taken and stored at 15°C until the conclusion of the experiments. Control larvae were fed non-B. thuringiensis cotton or diet. Larval tissue (20 mg) from each sampling time was assayed for esterase activity.
Inhibition of esterase by Cry1Ac toxin.
Cry1Ac protoxin (crystals and spores) and activated Cry1Ac (crystals) were dissolved in 50 mM carbonate buffer (pH 9.5). Small (3- to 4-mg) larvae were used for these experiments. Fifty larvae of each strain were homogenized in 1.0 ml of 0.02 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) containing 0.05% Triton X-100. Aliquots (50 µl), were pipetted into Eppendorf tubes. Cry1Ac was added to the aliquots, and the volume was adjusted to 150 µl with carbonate buffer. The tubes were incubated for 60 min at 25°C. Esterase activity was determined for replicate 10-µl aliquots. The final concentrations of Cry1Ac protoxin and activated toxin ranged from 2.0 x 108 to 2.0 x 105 µg/assay and from 5.0 x 108 to 5.0 x 106 µg/assay, respectively.
Surface plasmon resonance.
SPR techniques using BIAcore were used to study H. armigera esterase/Cry1Ac interactions. Esterase isoenzymes from the resistant "silver selected" strain were purified by anion-exchange chromatography. Approximately 1,800 response units of activated Cry1Ac toxin in 10 mM sodium acetate (pH 4.0) was bound to a CM5 carboxymethyl surface using 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-carbodiimide-N-hydroxysuccinimide chemistry. Purified H. armigera esterases from the Cry1Ac-resistant silver selected strain were then passed across this surface at concentrations ranging from 1.74 µM to 27.8 µM in 10 mM disodium tetraborate-1 M NaCl (pH 8.5) (to approximate midgut conditions). The Cry1Ac surface was regenerated between each injection with two 10-s injections of glycine (pH 1.5).
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TABLE 1. Responses of Cry1Ac-resistant -and susceptible Australian H. armigera strains to formulated Cry1Aca
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FIG. 1. Survival of larvae of Cry1Ac-susceptible and "silver selected" (silver sel) strains of H. armigera on leaves of conventional non-B. thuringiensis (Sicot 189), Ingard (Sicot 189i), and Bollgard II (Sicot 289b) cotton varieties. The errors bars indicate 95% confidence intervals.
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FIG. 2. Polyacrylamide gels showing esterase activities in larvae of lab susceptible (Lab. sus.), field susceptible (Field sus.), and silver selected (Silver sel.) strains of H. armigera. Each track contained the equivalent of 5% of a 3- to 4-mg larva.
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FIG. 3. Total esterase activities in 3- to 4-mg larvae of strains of H. armigera, including the "silver selected" strain, the Cry1Ac-susceptible lab strain, and Cry1Ac-susceptible field strains. The error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals. mOD, optical density x 103.
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FIG. 4. Total esterase activities in 3- to 4-mg larvae of strains of H. armigera, including the "silver selected" strain (Silver sel.), the Cry1Ac-susceptible lab strain (Lab st), and F1 backcrosses. The error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals. sus., susceptible; mOD, optical density x 103.
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FIG. 5. Polyacrylamide gels showing esterase activities in larvae of the lab susceptible (Lab. sus.), "silver selected" (Silver sel.), and F1 backcross strains of H. armigera. Each track contained the equivalent of 5% of a 3- to 4-mg larva.
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FIG. 6. In vitro esterase inhibition by Cry1Ac protoxin (A) and activated toxin (B) in the Cry1Ac-susceptible, resistant "silver selected" (Silver sel.), and F1 backcross strains of H. armigera. The error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals.
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FIG. 7. Sensogram plot of association and dissociation curves for purified esterase from the Cry1Ac-resistant "silver selected" H. armigera strain to activated Cry1Ac toxin and kinetic data from the surface plasmon resonance analysis of binding.
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FIG. 8. In vivo esterase inhibition (with respect to non-Cry1Ac-treated controls) in "silver selected" strain larvae fed formulated Cry1Ac (0.0012 mg Cry1Ac/0.5 g diet) (A) or fed actively Cry1Ac-expressing Ingard cotton leaves (B). The error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals.
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Findings concerning esterase binding to Cry1Ac are very significant because sequestration is recognized as a potential B. thuringiensis delta-endotoxin resistance mechanism. Given the greatly increased esterase titer in the "silver selected" strain, esterase could have the ability to bind to and thus detoxify considerable quantities of Cry1Ac. F1 backcross data proved that extra esterase and the ability of this esterase to bind to Cry1Ac were undoubtedly linked to resistance. Although no appreciable hydrolysis of the protein by resistant esterase may take place, the very large molar amounts of esterase in resistant H. armigera could be sufficient to sequester quantities of the toxin, thus rendering it harmless before it reaches the target site.
In vivo data (Fig. 8) showed that esterase in live first-instar larvae of the H. armigera "silver selected" strain binds to Cry1Ac and thus could be significant in the field. Esterase sequestration, a potential resistance mechanism, has great ecological significance because of the capacity for selection by transgenic cotton crops. The finding that resistant larvae apparently sequester and detoxify Cry1Ac toxin while they are feeding on transgenic cotton is highly significant because it also provides a direct field mechanism for the observed resistance to Cry1Ac in the silver strain of H. armigera.
Mechanisms previously reported to confer resistance to B. thuringiensis toxins are based on modifications to the receptor binding site (8) or alterations in the proteases that cleave the protoxin, processing it into a smaller active toxin (1). The potential for H. armigera esterase to bind to and detoxify B. thuringiensis toxins is of great concern because esterase-based resistance mechanisms in insects are not uncommon. The vast overproduction of esterase in the "silver selected" strain may be unique to Cry1Ac resistance. However, given that Australian H. armigera has developed esterase-based resistance mechanisms in the past, it is unclear whether this esterase-mediated Cry1Ac resistance mechanism is in any way connected with the widespread use of conventional insecticides. Cross-resistance studies and further experiments with other B. thuringiensis resistant species with widespread resistance to both chemical and B. thuringiensis insecticides may help clarify the situation.
Confirmation of Cry1Ac resistance in a strain of H. armigera derived from survivors of a field Cry1Ac resistance monitoring program in Australia and the finding that there is inherited increased esterase activity, which genetically segregates with resistance and can sequester Cry1Ac, are important to the future of B. thuringiensis crops. Of further concern is the semidominant status of the resistance mechanism, which makes management of H. armigera resistance with Bollgard II cotton more difficult. Survival on transgenic cotton further emphasizes the field significance of resistance to Cry1Ac. Cry1Ac resistance places additional selection pressure on the Cry2Ab toxin component of Bollgard II cotton. Finally, given that H. armigera is a cosmopolitan pest of cotton and other crops, the existence of an esterase-mediated resistance mechanism may pose a considerable threat to the future efficacy of B. thuringiensis transgenic crops worldwide.
We thank Ray Ackhurst (CSIRO Entomology) for providing the laboratory susceptible strain.
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