Publication | Closed Access
Differences in the midgut proteolytic activity of twoHeliothis virescens strains, one susceptible and one resistant toBacillus thuringiensis toxins
133
Citations
40
References
1996
Year
ToxinologyEntomologyTwoheliothis Virescens StrainsMidgut Proteolytic ActivityMidgut ContentsMidgut ExtractsInsecticideProteomicsMicrobial ToxinBiochemistryHost ResistanceHost-microbe InteractionBiologyNatural SciencesPesticide ResistancePathogenesisHyperparasiteMicrobiologyThuringiensis ToxinsMedicineInsect Midgut Membrane
The development of resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis toxic proteins is a growing concern because it could threaten both conventional and gene transfer use of this environmentally safe biological insecticide. The most common mechanism of resistance involves changes in binding affinity of toxin receptors in the insect midgut membrane. This has not been the case in Heliothis virescens. We have investigated changes in midgut proteolytic activity as a possibility to explain the resistance observed in this insect species. We have developed an improvement of known methods to demonstrate proteolytic activity in crude extracts. Using this method we have found differences in the proteolytic activity profile of midgut extracts of a susceptible and a resistant H. virescens strain. We also have studied the in vitro processing of CrylA(b) toxin and protoxin by midgut contents of both strains. SDS-PAGE of the in vitro degradation products showed differences between the strains. The resistant strain degrades protoxin more slowly and processes the active toxin more quickly than the susceptible strain. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1