화학공학소재연구정보센터
Current Microbiology, Vol.23, No.1, 51-57, 1991
EFFECTS OF COMPONENTS OF THE BACILLUS-SPHAERICUS TOXIN ON MOSQUITO LARVAE AND MOSQUITO-DERIVED TISSUE CULTURE-GROWN CELLS
Bacillus sphaericus 2362 produces a parasporal crystal containing 42 and 51 kilodalton (kDa) proteins. Both of these proteins are required for toxicity to mosquito larvae; neither is toxic alone. When overexpressed in B. subtilis, these two proteins accumulate as amorphous inclusions (AIs). Bioassays involving larvae of Culex pipiens and different ratios of these AIs indicated that maximal toxicity was observed at a ratio of approximately one 42-kDa protein to one 51-kDa protein. Purified preparations of these proteins, as well as derivatives similar to those which accumulate in the gut of mosquito larvae, were also toxic when combined, but not toxic singly. Different results were obtained when the toxicity of these preparations was tested for tissue culture-grown cells of C. quinquefasciatus. Under these conditions, the 39-kDa derivative of the 42-kDa protein was alone sufficient for toxicity, which was not increased by the addition of the 51-kDa protein or its derivatives. These results indicate that the B. sphaericus larvicide acts as a binary toxin in mosquitos, whereas only the 39-kDa protein is required for full toxicity to tissue culture-grown cells.