Search results for "Helicoverpa armigera"

showing 10 items of 15 documents

Characterization of the resistance to Vip3Aa in Helicoverpa armigera from Australia and the role of midgut processing and receptor binding.

2016

AbstractCrops expressing genes from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt crops) are among the most successful technologies developed for the control of pests but the evolution of resistance to them remains a challenge. Insect resistant cotton and maize expressing the Bt Vip3Aa protein were recently commercialized, though not yet in Australia. We found that, although relatively high, the frequency of alleles for resistance to Vip3Aa in field populations of H. armigera in Australia did not increase over the past four seasons until 2014/15. Three new isofemale lines were determined to be allelic with previously isolated lines, suggesting that they belong to one common gene and this mechanism is relative…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineCrops AgriculturalInsecticidesHelicoverpa armigeraPlant disease resistanceMothsmedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesArticleMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisBotanymedicineAnimalsBinding siteGeneAllelesDisease ResistancePlant DiseasesMultidisciplinarybiologyToxinfungiAustraliaMidgutbiology.organism_classificationPlants Genetically Modified010602 entomology030104 developmental biologyCry1AcScientific reports
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Binding Site Alteration Is Responsible for Field-Isolated Resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis Cry2A Insecticidal Proteins in Two Helicoverpa Species

2010

Background Evolution of resistance by target pests is the main threat to the long-term efficacy of crops expressing Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) insecticidal proteins. Cry2 proteins play a pivotal role in current Bt spray formulations and transgenic crops and they complement Cry1A proteins because of their different mode of action. Their presence is critical in the control of those lepidopteran species, such as Helicoverpa spp., which are not highly susceptible to Cry1A proteins. In Australia, a transgenic variety of cotton expressing Cry1Ac and Cry2Ab (Bollgard II) comprises at least 80% of the total cotton area. Prior to the widespread adoption of Bollgard II, the frequency of alleles conf…

0106 biological sciencesCrops AgriculturalInsecticidesHelicoverpa punctigeraScienceUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Biología de insectos (Entomología)::Entomología generalBacillus thuringiensisBacterial ProteinGenetically modified cropsHelicoverpa armigera01 natural sciencesMicrobiologyLepidoptera genitaliaInsecticide Resistance03 medical and health sciencesBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisBotanyBacillus thuringiensiBiotechnology/Applied MicrobiologyAnimalsMode of actionBiotechnology/Plant BiotechnologyHelicoverpaInsecticide030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryBinding SitesbiologyAnimalQfungiBinding SiteRbiology.organism_classificationBinding site alterationHelicoverpa speciesLepidoptera010602 entomologyCry1AcBacillus thuringiensis; Binding site alteration; Helicoverpa speciesMedicine:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Biología de insectos (Entomología)::Entomología general [UNESCO]Plant Biology/Agricultural BiotechnologyResearch ArticleProtein BindingPLoS ONE
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Efficacy and Resistance Management Potential of a Modified Vip3C Protein for Control of Spodoptera frugiperda in Maize

2018

AbstractA modified Vip3C protein has been developed that has a spectrum of activity that has the potential to be commercially useful for pest control, and shows good efficacy against Spodoptera frugiperda in insect bioassays and field trials. For the first time Vip3A and Vip3C proteins have been compared to Cry1 and Cry2 proteins in a complete set of experiments from insect bioassays to competition binding assays to field trials, and the results of these complementary experiments are in agreement with each other. Binding assays with radiolabelled toxins and brush border membrane vesicles from S. frugiperda and Helicoverpa armigera show that the modified Vip3C protein shares binding sites wi…

0301 basic medicineBrush bordermedia_common.quotation_subject030106 microbiologyBacillus thuringiensislcsh:MedicineInsectBiologyHelicoverpa armigeraSpodopteraSpodopteraZea maysArticleInsecticide Resistance03 medical and health sciencesBacillus thuringiensisBioassayAnimalsBinding sitePest Control Biologicallcsh:Sciencemedia_commonMultidisciplinaryBinding Sitesbusiness.industryfungilcsh:RPest controlbiology.organism_classificationPlants Genetically ModifiedEndotoxinsBiochemistryLarvalcsh:QbusinessScientific Reports
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Analysis of cross-resistance to Vip3 proteins in eight insect colonies, from four insect species, selected for resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis i…

2018

Abstract Bacillus thuringiensis Vip3 proteins are synthesized and secreted during the vegetative growth phase. They are activated by gut proteases, recognize and bind to midgut receptors, form pores and lyse cells. We tested the susceptibility to Vip3Aa and Vip3Ca of Cry1A-, Cry2A-, Dipel- and Vip3-resistant insect colonies from different species to determine whether resistance to other insecticidal proteins confers cross-resistance to Vip3 proteins. As expected, the colonies resistant to Cry1A proteins, Dipel (Helicoverpa armigera, Trichoplusia ni, Ostrinia furnacalis and Plodia interpunctella) or Cry2Ab (H. armigera and T. ni) were not cross-resistant to Vip3 proteins. In contrast, H. arm…

0301 basic medicineProteasesInsectabiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectfungi030106 microbiologyBacillus thuringiensisMidgutInsectHelicoverpa armigerabiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyInsecticide Resistance03 medical and health sciencesBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisTrichoplusiaAnimalsPest Control BiologicalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCross-resistancemedia_commonOstrinia furnacalisJournal of Invertebrate Pathology
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Characterization of Bacillus thuringiensis isolates by their insecticidal activity and their production of Cry and Vip3 proteins.

2018

WOS: 000449027600099 PubMed ID: 30383811 Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) constitutes the active ingredient of many successful bioinsecticides used in agriculture. In the present study, the genetic diversity and toxicity of Bt isolates was investigated by characterization of native isolates originating from soil, fig leaves and fruits from a Turkish collection. Among a total of 80 Bt isolates, 18 of them were found carrying a vip3 gene (in 23% of total), which were further selected. Insecticidal activity of spore/crystal mixtures and their supernatants showed that some of the Bt isolates had significantly more toxicity against some lepidopteran species than the HD1 reference strain. Five isolate…

0301 basic medicineTurkeyProtein ExpressionBacillus Thuringiensislcsh:MedicineArtificial Gene Amplification and ExtensionBacillusProtein SequencingMothsToxicologyPathology and Laboratory MedicinePolymerase Chain ReactionDatabase and Informatics MethodsBacillus thuringiensisMedicine and Health SciencesToxinslcsh:ScienceMaterialsSoil MicrobiologyMultidisciplinaryBacterial PathogensMedical MicrobiologyPhysical SciencesPathogensSequence AnalysisResearch ArticleSequence analysisBioinformatics030106 microbiologyBacterial ToxinsMaterials ScienceToxic AgentsSequence DatabasesBiologySpodopteraHelicoverpa armigeraResearch and Analysis MethodsCrystalsMicrobiologyMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesBacterial ProteinsGene Expression and Vector TechniquesAnimalsPest Control BiologicalMolecular Biology TechniquesSequencing TechniquesGeneMolecular BiologyMicrobial PathogensPlant DiseasesGenetic diversityMolecular Biology Assays and Analysis TechniquesToxicityBacterialcsh:RfungiOrganismsBiology and Life Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationFicusSporePlant Leaves030104 developmental biologyBiological DatabasesCry1AcSusceptibilityFruitlcsh:QPloS one
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Common receptor for Bacillus thuringiensis toxins Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja in Helicoverpa armigera, Helicoverpa zea and Spodoptera exigua

2005

ABSTRACT Binding studies using 125 I-Cry1Ac and biotinylated Cry1Fa toxins indicate the occurrence of a common receptor for Cry1Ac, Cry1Fa, and Cry1Ja in Helicoverpa armigera , Helicoverpa zea , and Spodoptera exigua . Our results, along with previous binding data and the observed cases of cross-resistance, suggest that this pattern seems to be widespread among lepidopteran species.

Bacterial ToxinsBiotecnologia agrícolaBacillus thuringiensisMicrobiologiaReceptors Cell SurfaceSpodopteraHelicoverpa armigeraSpodopteraBinding CompetitiveApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyLepidoptera genitaliaHemolysin ProteinsBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisExiguaBotanyInvertebrate MicrobiologyAnimalsBinding SitesBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsEcologybiologyfungibiology.organism_classificationEndotoxinsLepidopteraCry1AcInsect ProteinsNoctuidaeHelicoverpa zeaFood ScienceBiotechnology
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Interaction of Bacillus thuringiensis Toxins with Larval Midgut Binding Sites of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)

2004

ABSTRACT In 1996, Bt-cotton (cotton expressing a Bacillus thuringiensis toxin gene) expressing the Cry1Ac protein was commercially introduced to control cotton pests. A threat to this first generation of transgenic cotton is the evolution of resistance by the insects. Second-generation Bt-cotton has been developed with either new B. thuringiensis genes or with a combination of cry genes. However, one requirement for the “stacked” gene strategy to work is that the stacked toxins bind to different binding sites. In the present study, the binding of 125 I-labeled Cry1Ab protein ( 125 I-Cry1Ab) and 125 I-Cry1Ac to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) of Helicoverpa armigera was analyzed in com…

Bacterial ToxinsPopulationBacillus thuringiensisCarbohydratesDrug ResistanceHelicoverpa armigeraModels BiologicalApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyHemolysin Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundBacterial ProteinsLectinsBacillus thuringiensisInvertebrate MicrobiologyAnimalsBinding siteSoybean agglutininPest Control BiologicaleducationGossypiumeducation.field_of_studyBinding SitesBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsEcologybiologyfungifood and beveragesPlants Genetically Modifiedbiology.organism_classificationSialic acidEndotoxinsLepidopteraKineticsCry1AcchemistryBiochemistryGenes BacterialLarvaNoctuidaeDigestive SystemFood ScienceBiotechnologyApplied and Environmental Microbiology
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Downregulation of a Chitin Deacetylase-Like Protein in Response to Baculovirus Infection and Its Application for Improving Baculovirus Infectivity

2009

ABSTRACT Several expressed sequence tags (ESTs) with homology to chitin deacetylase-like protein (CDA) were selected from a group of Helicoverpa armigera genes whose expression changed after infection with H. armigera single nucleopolyhedrovirus (HearNPV). Some of these ESTs coded for a midgut protein containing a chitin deacetylase domain (CDAD). The expressed protein, HaCDA5a, did not show chitin deacetylase activity, but it showed a strong affinity for binding to chitin. Sequence analysis showed the lack of any chitin binding domain, described for all currently known peritrophic membrane (PM) proteins. HaCDA5a has previously been detected in the H. armigera PM. Such localization, togethe…

BaculoviridaeExpressed Sequence TagvirusesMolecular Sequence DataImmunologyDown-RegulationChitinMothMothsSpodopteraSpodopteraHelicoverpa armigeraMicrobiologyAmidohydrolasesMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundChitinDownregulation and upregulationChitin bindingVirologyAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceCells CulturedPhylogenyOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisExpressed Sequence TagsAmidohydrolaseInfectivitySequence Homology Amino AcidbiologyAnimalOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysiGene Expression ProfilingfungiSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationVirologyIsoenzymeGenome Replication and Regulation of Viral Gene ExpressionChitin deacetylaseIsoenzymeschemistryInsect ScienceBaculoviridaeSequence AlignmentJournal of Virology
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Specific binding  of Bacillus thuringiensis Cry2A insecticidal proteins to a common site in the midgut of Helicoverpa species

2008

ABSTRACT For a long time, it has been assumed that the mode of action of Cry2A toxins was unique and different from that of other three-domain Cry toxins due to their apparent nonspecific and unsaturable binding to an unlimited number of receptors. However, based on the homology of the tertiary structure among three-domain Cry toxins, similar modes of action for all of them are expected. To confirm this hypothesis, binding assays were carried out with 125 I-labeled Cry2Ab. Saturation assays showed that Cry2Ab binds in a specific and saturable manner to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMVs) of Helicoverpa armigera . Homologous-competition assays with 125 I-Cry2Ab demonstrated that this toxi…

BioquímicaBrush borderBiotecnologia agrícolaBacillus thuringiensisMicrobiologiaPlasma protein bindingHelicoverpa armigeraApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyIodine RadioisotopesHemolysin ProteinsBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisPlaguicidesInvertebrate MicrobiologyAnimalsBinding siteHelicoverpaBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsStaining and LabelingEcologybiologyfungiMidgutbiology.organism_classificationEndotoxinsGastrointestinal TractLepidopteraKineticsBiochemistryHelicoverpa zeaProteïnesProtein BindingFood ScienceBiotechnology
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Specific binding of radiolabeled Cry1Fa insecticidal protein from Bacillus thuringiensis to midgut sites in lepidopteran species

2012

ABSTRACT Cry1Fa insecticidal protein was successfully radiolabeled with 125 I-Na. Specific binding to brush border membrane vesicles was shown for the lepidopteran species Ostrinia nubilalis , Spodoptera frugiperda , Spodoptera exigua , Helicoverpa armigera , Heliothis virescens , and Plutella xylostella . Homologous competition assays were performed to obtain equilibrium binding parameters ( K d [dissociation constant] and R t [concentration of binding sites]) for these six insect species.

BioquímicavirusesBiotecnologia agrícolaBacillus thuringiensisHelicoverpa armigeraSpodopteraSpodopteraApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyOstriniaIodine RadioisotopesHemolysin ProteinsPlagues ControlBacterial ProteinsSpecies SpecificityBacillus thuringiensisExiguaBotanyparasitic diseasesPlaguicidesInvertebrate MicrobiologyAnimalsBinding siteTransport VesiclesBinding SitesEcologybiologyHeliothis virescensBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsMicrovillifungiPlutellabiology.organism_classificationEndotoxinsLepidopteraBiochemistryDigestive SystemProteïnesFood ScienceBiotechnology
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