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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2007, p. 7744-7746, Vol. 73, No. 23
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/AEM.01510-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Improving the Insecticidal Activity against Resistant Culex quinquefasciatus Mosquitoes by Expression of Chitinase Gene chiAC in Bacillus sphaericus{triangledown}

Yajun Cai,1,2 Jianpin Yan,1 Xiaomin Hu,1 Bei Han,1 and Zhiming Yuan1*

State Key Laboratory of Virology, Wuhan Institute of Virology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430071, China,1 Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100039, China2

Received 5 July 2007/ Accepted 5 October 2007


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ABSTRACT
 
Expression of a chitinase gene, chiAC, from Bacillus thuringiensis in B. sphaericus 2297 using the binary toxin promoter yielded a recombinant strain that was 4,297-fold more toxic than strain 2297 against resistant Culex quinquefasciatus. These results show that this chitinase can synergize the toxicity of the binary toxin against mosquitoes and thus may be useful in managing mosquito resistance to B. sphaericus.


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INTRODUCTION
 
Insects of dipteran species such as Culex spp., Anopheles spp., and Aedes spp. are responsible for the transmission of many infectious disease agents. Directing an attack against these mosquitoes is recognized as one of the more effective approaches for eradicating the threat from infectious diseases (4). As a gram-positive, spore-forming, aerobic, entomopathogenic bacterium, Bacillus sphaericus has been successfully used for mosquito control in the last decade. Its activity against target mosquito larvae is mainly due to the crystal toxin, commonly referred to as the binary toxin, as it consists of equimolar amounts of two proteins of 51 and 42 kDa. (1). However, high-level resistance against B. sphaericus binary toxin after intensive treatment has developed in mosquitoes (6), with resistance ratios ranging from 35- to 150,000-fold in the laboratory (5, 8) and from 10- to 100,000-fold in the field (15). Experiments testing binary toxin binding to the mosquito larval midgut in vitro have demonstrated that resistance of mosquitoes to B. sphaericus binary toxin has occurred mainly because of elimination of the toxin-binding site on the midgut brush border membrane fraction (1, 6). The appearance of high-level of resistance in mosquitoes is a threat to the future application of B. sphaericus as a mosquito control agent.

On the basis of the sequence of the chi gene from B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis (GenBank accession no. AF526379), two pairs of primers, chiAC-1-chiAC-3 and chiAC-2-chiAC-3, were designed for amplifying the chiAC open reading frame by PCR with different enzyme digestion sites introduced from strain T04A001 (3) (Table 1) as described elsewhere (17). After digestion with EcoRI and HindIII, the PCR fragment amplified with primers chiAC-1 and chiAC-3 was ligated with EcoRI/HindIII-digested plasmid pET28a and the resulting plasmid was transformed into Escherichia coli BL21. The recombinant E-pETC21 was selected on LB agar supplemented with kanamycin (50 µg/ml). The 70-kDa ChiAC fusion protein was purified for preparation of rabbit anti-ChiAC with a His-Bind Resin chromatography kit by following the procedure provided by the manufacturer (Novagen) (9).


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TABLE 1. Primers used in this study

For the expression of chiAC in B. sphaericus, a binary toxin promoter was amplified as described elsewhere (14) with primers pbinary-1 and pbinary-2. The amplified binary toxin promoter (~0.5 kb) was digested with BamHI and SphI and then introduced into BamHI/SphI-digested vector pBU4, resulting in recombinant plasmid pBb. The open reading frame of ChiAC, obtained by PCR with primers chiAC-2 and chiAC-3, was inserted into pBb at the SphI and HindIII sites after digestion with SphI/HindIII, giving recombinant shuttle vector pBbC.

Plasmids pBbC and pBU4 were transformed into B. sphaericus 2297 (serotype H25, from the Institute Pasteur) by electroporation as described elsewhere (7). Recombinant strains 2297-pBU4 and 2297-pBbC were selected on LB agar supplemented with tetracycline (12.5 µg/ml) and then confirmed by PCR and plasmid restriction enzyme digestion. All B. sphaericus strains were grown in LB medium at 30°C with shaking (200 rpm); the cells and supernatant of cultures at different growth stages were collected by centrifugation and stored at –20°C for protein analysis and bioassays.

Recombinant B. sphaericus 2297-pBbC grew and developed normally in LB medium and produced a typical parasporal body during sporulation. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Western blot (9) analysis showed that recombinant 2297-pBbC could express an ~70-kDa chitinase during bacterial growth, and no corresponding band was detected in parental strain 2297 or control strain 2297-pBU4 (Fig. 1). SDS-PAGE and extracellular quantitative enzyme activity assays (3) indicated that ChiAC protein was expressed in recombinant B. sphaericus 2297-pBbC in LB medium throughout the vegetative growth and sporulation stage (Fig. 2), and the highest level of extracellular chitinase activity (360 U/ml) was observed at late sporulation and the level subsequently decreased (Fig. 3).


Figure 1
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FIG. 1. Protein analysis of expression of chiAC in recombinant B. sphaericus by SDS-PAGE (A) and Western blotting (B). Lane M, markers; lane 1, T04A001; lane 2, 2297; lane 3, 2297-pBU4; lane 4, 2297-pBbC.


Figure 2
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FIG. 2. Time-lapse analysis of expression of chiAC in recombinant B. sphaericus 2297-pBbC by SDS-PAGE (A) and Western blotting (B). Lane M, markers; lanes 1 to 13, bacterial cellular extracts taken from the cultures at 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 32, 40, 48, 56, 64, 72, and 80 h.


Figure 3
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FIG. 3. Kinetics of chitinase production during bacterial growth. Open squares, growth of 2297; open circles, growth of 2297-pBbC; filled squares, chitinase activity of 2297; filled circles, chitinase activity of 2297-pBbC. OD600, optical density at 600 nm.

Using the standard method recommended by the World Health Organization (13), the toxicity of recombinant and native B. sphaericus to second- and third-instar larvae of a susceptible and a resistant laboratory C. quinquefasciatus colony (SLCq and RLCq1, respectively) was evaluated (8, 16). The bioassay results (2) showed that the 50% lethal concentrations (LC50s) of parental strain 2297, control strain 2297-pBU4, and recombinant strain 2297-pBbC for susceptible C. quinquefasciatus were 7.52, 5.64, and 5.96 ng/ml, respectively, at 48 h, while the LC50s of 2297, 2297-pBU4, and 2297-pBbC for resistant C. quinquefasciatus were >100,000, >100,000, and 23.23 ng/ml, respectively. The ratios of mosquito colony RLCq1 resistance to 2297 and 2297-pBbC were 18,300- and 3.90-fold, respectively, compared with the susceptible colony SLCq. The expression of ChiAC in B. sphaericus 2297 increased the strain's toxicity against resistant C. quinquefasciatus by about 4,290 times compared to that of parental strain 2297 (Table 2).


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TABLE 2. Toxicity of native and recombinant strains of B. sphaericus for C. quinquefasciatus

The higher toxicity of strain 2297-pBbC to resistant C. quinquefasciatus compared to that of strain 2297 may be a consequence of synergy between the chitinase and binary toxin produced during sporulation (10, 11). After strains are digested by target mosquito larvae, the chitinase secreted by 2297-pBbC might degrade the chitin linkage in the peritrophic matrix; thus, the binary toxin can come into contact with target cells easily, resulting in cytopathogenicity without the specific toxin-receptor binding step.

A plasmid stability study revealed that foreign plasmid pBbC was not stable in recombinant strain 2297-pBbC under nonselective growth conditions. Within 7 days, the recombinant lost plasmid pBbC rapidly and only 0.01% tetracycline-resistant colonies, which harbored the foreign plasmid, were observed. Therefore, it is important to develop additional technologies to enhance the stability of the integrated chitinase gene by homologous recombination processes (12) to generate highly toxic B. sphaericus strains for mosquito control.


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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We are grateful to Simon Rayner for useful suggestions and critical reading of the manuscript and Cai Quanxin for technical assistance.

This project was supported by a 973 project (2003CB114201) and a grant (30470037) from NFSC, China.


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FOOTNOTES
 
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Wuhan Institute of Virology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430071, China. Phone: 86-27-87197242. Fax: 86-27-87198120. E-mail: yzm{at}pentium.whiov.ac.cn Back

{triangledown} Published ahead of print on 12 October 2007. Back


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2007, p. 7744-7746, Vol. 73, No. 23
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/AEM.01510-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.





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