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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2005, p. 5627-5629, Vol. 71, No. 9
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.9.5627-5629.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Common Receptor for Bacillus thuringiensis Toxins Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja in Helicoverpa armigera, Helicoverpa zea, and Spodoptera exigua
Carmen Sara Hernández and
Juan Ferré*
Departament de Genètica, Universitat de València, 46100 Burjassot, Valencia, Spain
Received 24 January 2005/
Accepted 23 March 2005

ABSTRACT
Binding studies using
125I-Cry1Ac and biotinylated Cry1Fa toxins
indicate the occurrence of a common receptor for Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa,
and Cry1Ja in
Helicoverpa armigera,
Helicoverpa zea, and
Spodoptera exigua. Our results, along with previous binding data and the
observed cases of cross-resistance, suggest that this pattern
seems to be widespread among lepidopteran species.

INTRODUCTION
Transgenic plants expressing
Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal
protein genes offer long-term and preventive measures against
several species of insect pests, including tunneling insects.
One of the main threats of the wide adoption of these crops
is the evolution of insect resistance as a response to the strong
selection pressure that will be imposed on the insect populations
(
7). Some strategies to delay or minimize the appearance of
resistance are based on the use of more than one Cry toxin in
either mixtures or rotations or combined in the same plant (
6).
For these strategies to be effective while at the same time
avoiding the development of cross-resistance, the toxins to
be considered have to have differing modes of action. Binding
site modification is the most frequent mechanism of resistance
to
B. thuringiensis toxins and has been shown to be the basis
of cross-resistance among Cry1A toxins (
7). Therefore, from
a resistance management perspective, toxins that use the same
binding sites to exert their toxic actions cannot be used as
replacements for or complements of each other.
Common binding sites for Cry1A and Cry1Ja have already been shown to occur in several insect species, which seems to be a general pattern in Lepidoptera (8). In the present study we have used Helicoverpa armigera, Helicoverpa zea, and Spodoptera exigua to integrate Cry1Fa into the binding model of Cry1Ja and Cry1A.
Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja toxins were obtained from B. thuringiensis recombinant strains (EG11070, EG11069, and EG7279) and prepared as trypsin-activated and chromatography-purified toxins (5). Using 125I-Cry1Ac toxin (21) and unlabeled Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja toxins as competitors, we performed binding competition experiments by incubating 25 µg/ml of brush border membrane vesicle (BBMV) proteins of H. armigera or H. zea or 50 µg/ml of S. exigua BBMV proteins following the protocol previously described (5). Cry1Fa and Cry1Ja toxins competed for the Cry1Ac binding site in the three species tested (Fig. 1). Quantitative estimates of the binding affinity of the three toxins indicate higher dissociation constant (KD) values for Cry1Fa and Cry1Ja than for Cry1Ac in the three insect species (Table 1). In S. exigua, Cry1Fa and Cry1Ja bound with moderate affinities (29 and 22 nM, respectively), whereas in H. armigera and H. zea, they bound with very low affinities (from 150 to 640 nM). In spite of the fact that the toxicities of Cry toxins do not always correlate with their binding affinities (4, 13, 22), the low affinity of Cry1Fa in H. armigera and H. zea agrees with its lack of toxicity against these species (12). Furthermore, Cry1Fa is toxic to S. exigua (3), which agrees with its higher affinity for the binding sites in this species.
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TABLE 1. KD values and concentrations of binding sites (Rt) for Cry1 toxins binding to BBMV proteins from H. armigera, H. zea, and S. exigua, determined using Cry1Ac as the labeled liganda
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In the range of concentrations tested, complete competition
of the
125I-Cry1Ac was observed only in
S. exigua, indicating
that Cry1Ac does not have binding sites other than those shared
with the heterologous toxins. In the
Helicoverpa species, neither
complete competition with Cry1Fa and Cry1Ja nor a plateau which
would have indicated the occurrence of unique Cry1Ac binding
sites was achieved. The analysis of the heterologous curves
gave a good fit to a single-site model, assuming a concentration
of receptors the same as that for Cry1Ac. In a previous paper
from our laboratory, Cry1Fa did not compete for Cry1Ac binding
sites in
H. armigera (
5), but subsequent experiments carried
out by us with the same batch of Cry1Fa toxin showed that the
toxin had deteriorated during storage.
To determine whether Cry1Fa could have binding sites in addition to the one shared with Cry1Ac and Cry1Ja, Cry1Fa was biotinylated and its binding was tested in competition experiments using 200 µg/ml of BBMV proteins. Toxin biotinylation, competition assays, sample transference, and detection were done as previously described (8). The results showed that both Cry1Ac and Cry1Ja competed for the Cry1Fa binding site in the three species (Fig. 2). Furthermore, since competition by unlabeled Cry1Fa was not more effective than that by the heterologous toxins, there is no evidence of unshared sites for Cry1Fa. To our knowledge, this is the first time that reciprocal competition assays with labeled Cry1Fa have ever been performed.
For
Plutella xylostella, an autosomal recessive gene conferring
high resistance to Cry1Aa, Cry1Ab, Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja
has been reported (
16,
17), suggesting that resistance to these
five toxins has a common physiological basis. Since in this
insect these five toxins share the same binding site in the
midgut epithelial membrane (
1) and reduced binding of Cry1A
toxins is responsible for resistance (
18), it is sensible to
assume that reported cross-resistance to Cry1Fa and Cry1Ja (
16,
17) might also be due to the alteration of the common receptor.
In
Heliothis virescens, a common binding site for Cry1Aa, Cry1Ab,
Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja has also been shown (
10), and reduced
binding of Cry1A toxins and Cry1Fa has been proposed as the
mechanism responsible for resistance to these toxins (
11). In
Ostrinia nubilalis, low levels of cross-resistance to Cry1Fa
were observed among Cry1Ab-selected strains (
15), and inhibition
of Cry1Ab binding by Cry1Fa has also been shown (
9).
Amino acid sequence similarity studies in domain II, the specificity-determining domain of Cry toxins and the one mainly involved in receptor binding (14), have shown that Cry1Fa and Cry1Ja are closer to the Cry1A cluster than the rest of the Cry toxins are (2, 19, 20). So far, all available information on binding site competition suggests that Cry1Aa, Cry1Ab, Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja share a common binding site in most, if not all, members of the order Lepidoptera. Since it seems that Cry1Fa does not have binding sites other than those shared with Cry1Ac or Cry1Ja in the species tested, we propose that Cry1Fa and Cry1Ja exert their toxic actions in some Lepidoptera species by using the same target sites as those used by the Cry1A toxins.
That Cry1Aa, Cry1Ab, Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja bind to common sites explains, in an elegant form, the biochemical basis of multiple resistances and cross-resistances among these toxins observed in some insect species. Insects that lack additional sites for Cry1Fa or Cry1Ja could become resistant simultaneously to the five toxins relatively easily. Nevertheless, this model does not preclude other outcomes, since alterations in the receptor molecule may not always render a reduction in binding involving all five toxins but may be more selective, affecting binding of just some of them, as has been described for P. xylostella strains lacking binding of Cry1Ab without affecting binding of Cry1Ac (1, 18, 23).
In Bt cotton, genes expressing B. thuringiensis Cry1Ac and Cry1Fa toxins have been combined in the same plant to confer a broader-spectrum resistance to cotton pests. With this approach, species which are nonsusceptible to Cry1Fa, such as H. armigera and H. zea, can be controlled with the Cry1Ac toxin, whereas the Cry1Fa toxin is effective against Spodoptera spp., which are little affected by Cry1Ac. However, from a resistance management standpoint, neither transgenic plants expressing pairwise combinations of Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja nor rotations of Bt crops containing single genes of these three toxins will offer a good strategy for controlling those insects susceptible to more than one of these toxins. Populations of insects without alternative sites for Cry1Fa, previously exposed to first-generation Cry1A crops, could have already started to develop cross-resistance to Cry1Fa. In the case of cotton, populations exposed to the dual gene strategy would be under strong pressure to select for mutations affecting the common receptor. Since primary pests of this crop are not susceptible to both Cry1Ac and Cry1Fa, the risk for cross-resistance is not as great for them as it is for potential secondary pests susceptible to both toxins. In the case of corn, primary pests susceptible to Cry1Ab and Cry1Fa, such as O. nubilalis (9, 15) and Sesamia nonagrioides (F. Ortego and P. Castañera, personal communication), do exist. Therefore, establishing the binding site model in these species is of extreme importance for the appropriate design of resistance management strategies.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank J. Van Rie and J. González-Cabrera for critically
reading the manuscript.
This work was conducted within a Bayer BioScience/Universitat de València Research Collaboration.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Departament de Genètica, Universitat de València, Dr. Moliner 50, 46100 Burjassot, Valencia, Spain. Phone: 34-96-354-4506. Fax: 34-96-354-3029. E-mail:
Juan.Ferre{at}uv.es.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2005, p. 5627-5629, Vol. 71, No. 9
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.9.5627-5629.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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