Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.51, No.1, 79-84, 1999
Efficient expression of mosquito-larvicidal proteins in a gram-negative bacterium capable of recolonization in the guts of Anopheles dirus larva
The gram-negative bacterium, An11/2 G1, isolated from the guts of Anopheles dirus mosquito larvae, was identified as Enterobacter amnigenus. The E. amnigenus was able to recolonize in the gut of An. dirus larva but not in those of Aedes aegypti and Culex quinquefasciatus larvae. It was able to float in water for a longer period than Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis and Bacillus sphaericus. These are desirable characteristics for a delivery vehicle of mosquito-larvicidal toxins for the control of mosquito larvae, and E. amnigenus was therefore used as a host to express the cryIVB gene of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis and the binary toxin genes of B. sphaericus. The recombinant E. amnigenus produced a high level of CryIVB protein, which was toxic to larvae of Ae. aegypti and An. dirus. Another E. amnigenus producing the 51-kDa protein of B. sphaericus was toxic to larvae of An. dirus and Cx. quinquefasciatus. The recombinant plasmids were stable in E. amnigenus without the presence of selective pressure for at least 23 generations. The recombinant E. amnigenus should represent a desirable biological agent for controlling mosquito larvae.
Keywords:THURINGIENSIS SUBSP ISRAELENSIS;AGMENELLUM-QUADRUPLICATUM PR-6;BACILLUS-SPHAERICUS 2362;BIOLOGICAL-CONTROL;CRYSTALPROTEINS;TOXIN GENES;CLONING;CYANOBACTERIUM;CONSTRUCTION;TOXICITY