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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2007, p. 295-302, Vol. 73, No. 1
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.01974-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Weiguo Fang,1,2,
Shujuan Guo,1
Xiaoqiong Pei,1
Yongjun Zhang,1
Yuehua Xiao,1
Demou Li,1
Kai Jin,1
Michael J. Bidochka,2 and
Yan Pei1*
Biotechnology Research Center, Southwest University, Beibei, Chongqing, People's Republic of China,1 Department of Biological Sciences, Brock University, 500 Glenridge Avenue, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada L2S 3A12
Received 19 August 2006/ Accepted 25 October 2006
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One of the advantages of entomopathogenic fungi is that the host insect need not ingest them. Entomopathogenic fungi, such as Beauveria bassiana, infect the host insect by penetrating the insect cuticle. The fungal conidium attaches to the cuticle by nonspecific hydrophobic mechanisms (4) and subsequently germinates. The insect cuticle consists primarily of a chitin matrix embedded with proteins (7). Entomopathogenic fungi produce extracellular proteases and chitinases that degrade these proteinaceous and chitinous components, allowing hyphal penetration through the cuticle and access to the nutrient-rich insect hemolymph (6). Proteases, particularly the subtilisin-like protease called Pr1 (16), and the chitinase Bbchit1 (9) are important virulence factors for B. bassiana.
Chitinases are widely distributed and are found in viruses, bacteria, fungi, plants, and animals. Some of these chitinases contain a chitin-binding domain linked to the catalytic site via an intermediate region (2). Fungal chitinases belong to class III chitinases and are part of family 18 of glycosyl hydrolases (11, 12). Some fungal chitinases contain a chitin-binding domain (17, 23), while others do not (10, 23). The chitin-binding domain facilitates chitinase binding, thus allowing efficient degradation of chitin but not soluble substrates (3, 14). The chitin binding ability of the chitin-binding domain is also dependent on the position and type of certain amino acid residues. Amino acid substitutions within the chitin-binding domain of Bacillus circulans chitinase A1 resulted in a change from an irreversible chitin binding pattern to a reversible one (30). Two chitinase genes, Bbchit1 (9) and Bbchit2 (GenBank accession number AY147011), have been cloned from B. bassiana; however, neither has a chitin-binding domain.
Chitin is an important component of insect cuticle, which is the primary barrier against pathogens. Overexpression of Bbchit1 was able to increase the ability of B. bassiana to digest insect cuticle, resulting in increased virulence against insects (9). Here we are interested in fusing a chitin-binding domain to Bbchit1 to form an engineered chitinase, which may have higher chitinolytic ability and, consequently, increased virulence of B. bassiana toward insects. Five chitin-binding domains from different sources were individually fused to Bbchit1 to produce hybrid chitinases. The hybrid chitinases were expressed in Pichia pastoris and tested for binding efficiencies to chitin and chitinase activity. The hybrid chitinase which contained the chitin-binding domain from the silkworm Bombyx mori fused to Bbchit1 showed the greatest binding efficiency to chitin and the greatest chitinolytic activity. The hybrid chitinase gene was linked to a constitutive fungal promoter, and a B. bassiana transformant showed higher levels of virulence compared to the nontransformed strain or to a strain transformed with Bbchit1 with the constitutive promoter.
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was employed for DNA manipulations.
Sources of chitin-binding domains.
Five chitin-binding domains derived from a plant, a bacterium, and insects, which are distributed within different families of carbohydrate-binding modules according to the CAZy database (http://afmb.cnrs-mrs.fr/CAZY/), were selected to be fused to B. bassiana chitinase Bbchit1. Of these five chitin-binding domains, three were from insects and in the same carbohydrate-binding module family. The Drosophila putative chitin-binding domain was derived from the peritrophic matrix (29). The details of these chitin-binding domains and their assigned names and cloning methods are described in Table 1. All chitin-binding domains were cloned or synthesized into pMD-T vector (TaRaKa, Dalian, People's Republic of China).
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TABLE 1. Source of chitin-binding domains used to produce B. bassiana (Bbchit1) hybrid chitinases
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FIG. 1. Comparison of amino acid residues between the chitin-binding domain of chitinase from B. mori (BmChBD) and the corresponding altered chitin-binding domain (mBmChBD). Aromatic amino acid residues and several cysteine residues of BmChBD were substituted with alanine or glycine in mBmChBD. The mBmChBD included the following substitutions: Y496A, P498A, C503G, Y506A, W507A, F517A, C519A, P521A, F525A, C532G, D533A, W534A, and P535A.
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TABLE 2. Primers used in this study
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Binding efficiency of chitinase to chitin.
Powdered
-chitin from crab (32 µg; diameter of
0.25 mm) (Shanghai Chemicals Co., Shanghai, People's Republic of China) was washed with 10 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0) and mixed with 70 µg chitinase in 500 µl of 20 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0). After incubation for 1 h at 4°C with shaking (200 rpm), the mixture was centrifuged at 12,000 rpm at 4°C for 10 min. The supernatant was collected, and chitinase in the eluant was assayed by SDS-PAGE. In order to recover the chitinase bound to chitin, 500 µl of 200 mM NaCl and 8 M urea were used, sequentially, to wash the pellet. The supernatants from each step were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. The final pellet was suspended in 500 µl of 1% SDS and boiled for 10 min, and the supernatant was analyzed by SDS-PAGE. The SDS-polyacrylamide gel was scanned using an ImageMaster VDS-CL system (Total Lab 1D software) (Amersham, NJ), and protein amounts in the gel were calculated relative to band density.
The binding efficiencies of chitinases to chitin were also tested directly by fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) (Sigma-Aldrich, Shanghai, People's Republic of China). To label chitinase with FITC, a mixture containing 1 mg chitinase and 0.02 mg FITC in 0.25 M sodium bicarbonate buffer (pH 9.2) was incubated at 140 rpm at 25°C for 3 h. The labeling mixture was then desalted in a column (Amersham, NJ) with 20 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0) at 2 ml/min. The protein fractions were pooled, dialyzed against 20 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0), and concentrated against PEG 20000. The ratio of FITC to chitinase (F/P) was determined by the following formula: F/P = (2.87 x OD495)/[OD280 (0.35 x OD495)], where OD495 is the optical density at 495 nm.
FITC-labeled chitinases were bound to chitin as previously described for unlabeled chitinases. FITC-labeled chitinases bound to chitin were observed microscopically with an Olympus BX41 microscope (Olympus, Tokyo, Japan). The absorbance wavelength was 490 nm (emission wavelength, 520 nm).
Chitinase activity assay.
One soluble substrate and three insoluble substrates were used to assay chitinase activity. The three insoluble substrates were (i) the powdered
-chitin previously described, (ii) colloidal chitin (24), and (iii) silkworm cuticle. For the preparation of silkworm cuticle, ecdysal molts of fourth-instar silkworms were comminuted (diameter of
0.25 mm) and subsequently used as an insoluble substrate for chitinase activity assays (20). The soluble substrate was 4-methylumbelliferyl-N',N',N"-ß-D-triacetylchitotrioside [4-MU-(GlcNAc)3] (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO), and chitinase activity was assayed with a 10-min incubation at 37°C (29).
Thin-layer chromatography (TLC) analysis of chitinase hydrolysis products.
Chitin oligosaccharides were kindly provided by Chien-Jui Huang of National Taiwan University. Chitin hydrolytic products were analyzed by TLC (13).
Kinetic analysis of chitinases.
Kinetic analysis (Km and Vmax) was performed by the method of Arakane et al. (1) with modifications. The reaction mixture (700 µl) contained 250 µl of 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.4), 250 µl enzyme solution (0.2 µM), and 200 µl colloidal chitin at concentrations ranging from 1 mg/ml to 5 mg/ml.
Scanning electron microscopy.
Fourth-instar aphids (Myzus persicae) were frozen at 20°C for 1 h and treated with 1.7 µM chitinase in 20 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0) at 37°C for 12 h. Aphids were fixed with 1% (wt/vol) osmium tetroxide for 1 h. The samples were rinsed with distilled water, treated with 2% (wt/vol) tannic acid for 14 h, and then rinsed with distilled water. Postfixation was carried out in 1% (wt/vol) osmium tetroxide for 1 h. After the samples were dehydrated in a series of 50% to 100% ethanol and t-butyl alcohol-acetonitrile solutions, they were sputter coated with gold. The surfaces of the aphids were observed using a Hitachi S-3000N scanning electron microscope (Hitachi, Tokyo, Japan).
Blotting analysis.
Western blotting was performed according to the manufacturer's instructions (Opti-4CN Western blot kit; Bio-Rad, Philadelphia, PA). Rabbit Bbchit1 antibody (anti-Bbchit1) was previously described (9).
Northern blotting was conducted with 20 µg total RNA for each sample (21). RNA was prepared using RNeasy minipreparation kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA). The DNA probe (1,047-bp-long open reading frame of Bbchit1) was labeled with [
-32P]dCTP using a labeling kit (Amersham, NJ).
Chitinase vector construction.
Plasmid pBARGFP (Fig. 2) contained the herbicide resistance gene bar and enhanced green fluorescent protein gene egfp.
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FIG. 2. Maps of pBARGFP, overexpression vector for Bbchit1 (pBARGF-gpd:Bbchit1), Bbchit1-BmChBD (pBARGF-gpd:Bbchit1:BmChBD), Bbchit1-mBmChBD (pBARGF-gpd:Bbchit1:mBmChBD), and BmChBD (pBARGF-gpd:BmChBD). Pgpd is the promoter of gpd from Aspergillus nidulans, bar is the herbicide resistance gene, egfp is the enhanced green fluorescent protein gene, Ttrpc is the terminator of trpc from A. nidulans, Bbchit1 is the chitinase gene, BmChBD is a chitin-binding domain of a chitinase from B. mori, and the altered chitin-binding domain is mBmChBD.
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Fungal transformation and transformant screening.
Fungal transformations were conducted as previously described (22). Transformants were initially selected on the basis of herbicide (glufosinate ammonium; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) resistance and green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression. Mitotically produced single spore isolates of each transformant were obtained. Chitinase activity from the transformants grown in basal salt medium (0.03% NaCl [wt/vol], 0.03% MgSO4 [wt/vol], 0.03% K2HPO4 [wt/vol]) supplemented with 2% glucose (to suppress the expression of native Bbchit1) was assayed as previously described (9). Chitinase overexpression was confirmed by Northern and Western blotting analyses.
The insertion of target genes in the transformants was further confirmed by PCR. Primers P23 and P24 (Table 2) were used to confirm transformants with Bbchit1 insertion. Primers P2 and P10 (Table 2) were used to confirm transformants with Bbchit1-BmChBD and Bbchit1-mBmChBD. Primers P2 and P7 were used to confirm the insertion of BmChBD.
Bioassay.
Adult aphids (M. persicae) (0 to 2 days) reared on cabbage in a greenhouse were obtained by the method of Vandenberg et al. (28) and used for bioassays. Aphids were inoculated with fungal conidia at a concentration of 1 x 107 conidia/ml using a Potter precision laboratory spray tower (Burkard Manufacturing Co. Ltd., England). Infected aphids were transferred to an HPG-280H artificial climate cell (Donglian Electronic Company, Harbing, People's Republic of China) at 22 to 24°C and fed cabbage, and mortality was monitored at 12-h intervals. Control aphids were treated with water plus 0.05% (vol/vol) Tween 80. Three replicates were performed for each treatment and each replicate contained 30 aphids. Fifty percent lethal time (LT50), confidence interval, and other regression parameters were determined using the SPSS program.
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Chitin binding efficiencies of hybrid chitinases were dependent on chitin-binding domains. Bbchit1-BmChBD, Bbchit1-CfChBD, and Bbchit1-BcChBD had significantly higher binding efficiencies to chitin than wild-type Bbchit1 did (t = 5.528, 4.32, and 3.96, respectively; P < 0.05; df = 3). Chitin bound most efficiently to Bbchit1-BmChBD (93.8% ± 1.7% binding, n = 3), Bbchit1-CfChBD (73.9% ± 2.1% binding, n = 3), and Bbchit1-BcChBD (65.1% ± 1.2% binding, n = 3), whereas only 19.5% ± 2.9% (n = 3) of Bbchit1 was bound to chitin. The addition of a chitin-binding domain from D. melanogaster or M. charantia to Bbchit1 had no significant effect on the chitin binding efficiency (Bbchit1-DmChBD [23.2% ± 3.6% binding; n = 3] and Bbchit1-McChBD [24.1% ± 3.2% binding; n = 3]).
With Bbchit1-BmChBD, 49.7% of the chitinase was still bound to chitin after being washed with a urea solution and boiling in SDS solution. However, when this chitin-binding domain was altered, the chitin binding efficiency of Bbchit1-mBmChBD (11.5% ± 1.1% binding; n = 3) was lower than that of the wild-type Bbchit1. A NaCl solution was sufficient to release Bbchit1 and Bbchit1-mBmChBD from chitin (Fig. 3A). The greater binding efficiency of Bbchit1-BmChBD was also shown by the increased fluorescence of the FITC-labeled hybrid chitinase adsorbed onto chitin after being washed by 8 M urea, while the fluorescent intensities of Bbchit1 and Bbchit1-mBmChBD were relatively weaker after the washings (Fig. 3B). Therefore, the addition of a chitin-binding domain, BmChBD, resulted in higher chitin binding ability of Bbchit1, and certain amino acid residues within the chitin-binding domain were critical for binding.
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FIG. 3. (A) Chitin binding ability of Bbchit1, Bbchit-BmChBD, and Bbchit-mBmChBD to powdered -chitin. Purified chitinases were bound to powdered chitin. After an incubation for 1 h at 4°C, the mixture was centrifuged, the supernatant (unbound protein) was subjected to SDS-PAGE analysis, and the amount of protein bound to the powdered chitin (black) was recorded as the difference between input protein and unbound protein (in the supernatant). The protein bound to chitin after being washed sequentially with 200 mM NaCl (white) and 8 M urea (gray) and finally suspended in 1% SDS and boiled for 10 min (hatched) is shown. All experiments were repeated three times with three replicates for each repeat. Standard errors (error bars) are shown. (B) Chitin-binding assay of FITC-labeled Bbchit1, Bbchit1-BmChBD, and Bbchit1-mBmChBD. For a control, powdered chitin treated with 20 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.0) was used. Panels 1, powdered chitin bound to chitinase. Panels 2, powdered chitin with chitinases washed with 200 mM NaCl. Panels 3, powdered chitin with chitinases washed with 8 M urea.
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Bbchit1-BmChBD and Bbchit1 had similar optimum pH and temperature activities. Each showed chitinase activity from pH 4.0 to 9.0 with an optimum of pH 5.0 (data not shown). Chitinase activity with Bbchit1-BmChBD and Bbchit1 was optimal at 40°C (data not shown).
Chitin oligosaccharides of various lengths and colloidal chitin were used as substrates for chitinolytic activity whose products were assessed by TLC. Bbchit1 was unable to degrade GlcNAc2 within 4 h (Fig. 4A), suggesting that it did not possess N-acetyl-glucosaminidase activity. GlcNAc2 was the major product when GlcNAc3-6 or colloidal chitin was used as the substrate, indicating that Bbchit1 had chitobiosidase activity. However, the presence of GlcNAc when GlcNAc4, GlcNAc6, or colloidal chitin was used as a substrate suggested that GlcNAc3 was an intermediate product that was subsequently hydrolyzed to GlcNAc1 and GlcNAc2. Therefore, Bbchit1 is an endochitinase with chitiobiosidase activity. Bbchit1, Bbchit1-BmChBD, and Bbchit1-mBmChBD had similar hydrolytic products (Fig. 4B and C), showing that the addition of BmChBD did not alter the chitin digestion patterns of Bbchit1.
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FIG. 4. TLC analysis of chitinase hydrolytic products from respective chitin oligosaccharides and colloidal chitin as substrates. (A) Bbchit1, (B) Bbchit1-BmChBD, and (C) Bbchit1-mBmChBD. The chitin oligosaccharide hydrolytic products are shown vertically. C1 through C6 refer to GlcNAc1 through GlcNAc6, respectively. Substrates, except S (the chitin oligosaccharide standards) are shown horizontally. CC, colloidal chitin.
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FIG. 5. Chitinase activity on soluble substrate as well as different insoluble substrates, colloidal chitin, insect cuticle, and powdered chitin. Chitinase (2 nM) was used in the chitinase activity assays. (A) Chitinase activity against insoluble chitin. Bbchit1 (black), Bbchit1-BmChBD (white), and Bbchit1-mBmChBD (gray) are shown. One unit of chitinase activity was defined as the amount of enzyme required to release 1 µmol N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) per hour. (B) Chitinase activity against soluble chitin [4-MU-(GlcNAc)3]. One unit of chitinase activity was defined as the amount of enzyme required to release 1 nM MU per minute.
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FIG. 6. Scanning electron microscopy of the hydrolytic effects of Bbchit1, Bbchit1-BmChBD, and Bbchit1-mBmChBD on the gross morphological structure of aphid (Myzus persicae) cuticles. Chitinases were incubated with cuticle for 12 h at 37°C. (A) Control (20 mM potassium phosphate buffer [pH 6.0] without chitinase), (B) Bbchit1, (C) Bbchit1-BmChBD, (D) Bbchit1-mBmChBD. Bars = 1 µm.
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FIG. 7. Northern blotting and Western blotting analysis of wild-type B. bassiana and transformants overexpressing chitinase. (A) Top panel; Northern blotting analysis. Bottom panel; loading controls where each lane contained ca. 20 µg total RNA. (B) Western analysis. Each lane contained 15 µg protein. WT, B. bassiana wild-type; 1 and 2, representative transformants Bbchit1-mBmChBD-2 and Bbchit1-mBmChBD-5, overexpressing Bbchit1-mBmChBD; 3 and 4, representative transformants Bbchit1-BmChBD-19 and Bbchit1-BmChBD-42, overexpressing Bbchit1-BmChBD; 5 and 6, representative transformants Bbchit1-8 and Bbchit1-26, overexpressing Bbchit1; M, prestained protein standards (Bio-Rad, Philadelphia, PA).
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TABLE 3. Chitinase activity analysis in B. bassiana transformantsa
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The chitin-binding domain of chitinases has previously been found to be an important feature for efficient binding to insoluble chitin and hydrolysis of insoluble chitin. The removal of the substrate-binding domain from chitinases or cellulases decreases their activities on insoluble substrates but not on soluble substrates (19). Deletion of the chitin-binding domain from a Streptomyces griseus chitinase resulted in an inability to bind to powdered chitin, with a resultant decrease of 50% in hydrolytic activity compared to the wild type (15). Limon et al. (18) engineered a hybrid chitinase by fusing a chitin-binding domain of ChiA from Nicotiana tabacum to a chitinase from Trichoderma harzianum. This hybrid chitinase had greater in vitro binding efficiency to powdered chitin and to fungal cell walls. Chitin-binding domains in plant chitinases may contribute to resistance against fungal pathogens. A chitinase, RSC-a, produced by rye (Secale cereale) seeds possesses a typical chitin-binding domain and has greater binding efficiency to powdered chitin and stronger inhibition against Trichoderma spp. than chitinase RSC-c, which has no chitin-binding domain (27).
The alteration of amino acid residues in a chitin-binding domain from Bacillus circulans resulted in some mutants with greater chitin binding efficiencies, some with less binding, and others with no change (30). We found that changes in aromatic amino acid and cysteine residues in the chitin-binding domain (i.e., BmChBD
mBmChBD) resulted in reduced chitin binding. Moreover, the addition of the mutant chitin-binding domain to Bbchit1 (Bbchit1-mBmChBD) reduced its chitin binding efficiency. Possible explanations for this reduction might be that the amino acid alterations changed the tertiary structure or surface charge of Bbchit1.
The major constituents within insect cuticle are protein and chitin (7). Insect pathogenic fungi, such as B. bassiana and Metarhizium anisopliae, produce extracellular proteases and chitinases directed at hydrolyzing these cuticular components (6, 9, 16, 25). Constitutive expression of Pr1A by the insect pathogen M. anisopliae in infected insects resulted in a 25% increase in virulence and a concomitant decrease in host food consumption (26). The effectiveness of the strains with overexpression of Pr1A and, in this study, the engineered Bbchit1 strains create an opportunity to produce a strain with overexpression of Pr1 and Bbchit1, which may result in synergy of the two gene products.
Given the unique strategy of using genetic components derived from insects, one can envision the potential utility of several other ligands derived from insects in order to increase the effectiveness of transgenic entomopathogens. The chitin-binding domain could be fused onto Pr1A or other hydrolytic enzymes such as lipases. Insect tissue-specific ligands could be engineered onto fungal toxins directed toward the insect nervous system. There is an enormous array of metabolites produced by fungi that can be manipulated with specific ligands derived from the host insect itself. These engineered genes can be transformed into biocontrol fungi or genetic manipulation for crop protection.
Published ahead of print on 3 November 2006. ![]()
These authors contributed equally to this paper. ![]()
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