WO1998014578A1 - Biological insect control agents expressing insect-specific mite toxin genes, methods and compositions - Google Patents

Biological insect control agents expressing insect-specific mite toxin genes, methods and compositions Download PDF

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WO1998014578A1
WO1998014578A1 PCT/US1997/018077 US9718077W WO9814578A1 WO 1998014578 A1 WO1998014578 A1 WO 1998014578A1 US 9718077 W US9718077 W US 9718077W WO 9814578 A1 WO9814578 A1 WO 9814578A1
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insect
tox34
promoter
baculovirus
asn
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PCT/US1997/018077
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French (fr)
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Lois Miller
Albert Lu
Bruce Christian Black
Michael Dierks
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University Of Georgia Research Foundation, Inc.
American Cyanamid Company
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Priority to AU46715/97A priority Critical patent/AU722221B2/en
Priority to NZ334604A priority patent/NZ334604A/en
Priority to JP10516964A priority patent/JP2001501824A/en
Priority to BR9711840A priority patent/BR9711840A/en
Publication of WO1998014578A1 publication Critical patent/WO1998014578A1/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12NMICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
    • C12N15/00Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor
    • C12N15/09Recombinant DNA-technology
    • C12N15/11DNA or RNA fragments; Modified forms thereof; Non-coding nucleic acids having a biological activity
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K14/00Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
    • C07K14/435Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
    • C07K14/43504Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from invertebrates
    • C07K14/43513Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from invertebrates from arachnidae
    • C07K14/43531Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from invertebrates from arachnidae from mites
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01NPRESERVATION OF BODIES OF HUMANS OR ANIMALS OR PLANTS OR PARTS THEREOF; BIOCIDES, e.g. AS DISINFECTANTS, AS PESTICIDES OR AS HERBICIDES; PEST REPELLANTS OR ATTRACTANTS; PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS
    • A01N63/00Biocides, pest repellants or attractants, or plant growth regulators containing microorganisms, viruses, microbial fungi, animals or substances produced by, or obtained from, microorganisms, viruses, microbial fungi or animals, e.g. enzymes or fermentates
    • A01N63/50Isolated enzymes; Isolated proteins
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12NMICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
    • C12N2799/00Uses of viruses
    • C12N2799/02Uses of viruses as vector
    • C12N2799/021Uses of viruses as vector for the expression of a heterologous nucleic acid
    • C12N2799/026Uses of viruses as vector for the expression of a heterologous nucleic acid where the vector is derived from a baculovirus

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to methods and compositions for improved biological control of insect pests. More particularly, the present invention relates to the efficient expression of insect- specific toxins coding sequences in baculoviruses for use as biological insect control agents .
  • Baculoviruses are a large group of evolutionarily related viruses which infect only arthropods [Miller, L.K. (1981) in Genetic Engineering in the Plant Sciences, N. Panopoulous, (ed.), Praeger Publ., New York, pp. 203-224; Carstens, (1980) Trends in Biochemical Science 5_2_: 107-110; Harrap and Payne (1979) in Advances in Virus Research, Vol. 25, Lawfer et al . (eds.), Academic Press, New York, pp.
  • baculoviruses only infect insects which are pests of commercially important agricultural and forestry crops.
  • Other baculoviruses are known which specifically infect other insect pests, e.g., mosquitoes and fleas.
  • Such baculoviruses are potentially valuable as biological control agents .
  • a potential advantage of baculoviruses as biological pesticides is their host specificity. Because individual baculovirus strains usually only infect one or a few species of insects, they pose little or no risk to man or the environment, and can be used without adversely affecting beneficial insect species.
  • Baculovirus subgroups include nuclear polyhedrosis viruses, now called nucleopolyhedroviruses (NPVs) and granulosis viruses, now called granuloviruses (GV) .
  • NPVs nucleopolyhedroviruses
  • GV granuloviruses
  • the virions enveloped nucleocapsids
  • occlusion body This structure, referred to as an occlusion body, is the form found extraorganismally in nature, and it is generally responsible for spreading the infection between insects.
  • the characteristic feature of the NPVs is that many virions are embedded in each occlusion body, which is relatively large (up to 5 micrometers) .
  • Occlusion bodies of SNPVs are smaller and contain a single virion with multiple nucleocapsids each.
  • Multiple nucleopolyedrosis viruses MNPVs
  • MNPVs Multiple nucleopolyedrosis viruses
  • GVs Granulosis viruses
  • the crystalline protein matrix of the occlusion bodies of these forms is primarily composed of a single 25 to 33 kDa polypeptide which is known as polyhedrin or granulin.
  • infection is initiated when an insect ingests food contaminated with baculovirus particles, typically in the form of occlusion bodies.
  • the occlusion bodies dissociate under the alkaline conditions of the insect midgut, releasing the virions which then invade epithelial cells lining the gut.
  • Pre-occlusion bodies are also infective (WO 97/08297, published 3/6/97) .
  • the baculovirus migrates to the nucleus where replication takes place. Initially, specific viral proteins are produced within the infected cell via the transcription and translation of so-called "early genes.”
  • these proteins are required for the replication of the viral DNA, which begins 4 to 6 hours after the virus enters the cell.
  • Viral DNA replication proceeds up to about 24 hours post- infection (pi) .
  • infected cells express "late genes" at high levels. These include components of the nucleocapsid which surround the viral DNA during the formation of progeny virus particles .
  • Production of progeny virus particles begins around 12 hours pi. Initially, progeny virus migrate to the cell membrane where they acquire an envelope as they bud out from the surface of the cell. The nonoccluded virus particles can then infect other cells within the insect. Polyhedrin synthesis begins approximately 18 hours after infection and increases to very high levels by 24 to 48 hours pi.
  • AcMNPV Baculoviruses with improved insecticidal properties have been described.
  • AcMNPV in which the egrt (ecdysone glucosyl transferase) gene has been inactivated causes earlier cessation of feeding and earlier larvae death as compared to larvae infected with wild-type AcMNPV [See, e.g., U.S. Patent No. 5,352,451 (Miller et al . , issued October 4, 1994] .
  • Pyemotes tri tici the straw-itch mite, is one of thirteen known species of mites in the genus Pyemotes, all of which are predatory and which possess venoms causing mild to extreme toxicity in target insects .
  • the thirteen known species can be divided into two morphological groups which also differ in host preference, methods of dispersal and toxicity to their target prey, and in the effects of their toxins on insects and man.
  • the scolyti and ventricosus groups are summarized in Table 1. Most members of the ventricosus group have extremely insect-toxic venoms.
  • the mite venoms do not appear to be specific for particular insects, since the venoms are toxic to a wide variety of insect host and nonhost species. However, the P. tri tici toxins do not appear to be toxic to mammals.
  • Insect-specific toxins in the venom of P. tri tici have been purified and characterized [Tomalski et al . (1988) Toxicon 26 : 127-132 ;
  • TxP-I Tomalski et al . (1989) Toxicon 2_7 : 1151-1167] . These toxins are produced in female mites and injected into insect prey as components of the venom, resulting in paralysis of the prey, which allows the feeding female mite to become fully gravid, thus ensuring adequate nutrients for reproduction.
  • the toxin designated TxP-I has been purified to apparent homogeneity; it has an apparent molecular weight of 27,000, as determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Two other components were resolved which exhibit molecular weights of 28,000 and 29,000; these two components comprise TxP-II.
  • TxP-I and TxP-II are isoproteins [Tomalski et al . (1989) supra] .
  • DNA sequences encoding P. tri tici toxin proteins have been isolated and characterized, and expressed in AcMNPV. See, e.g., U.S. Patent No. 5,266,317, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
  • Insect-specific neurotoxins have also been found in the venoms of other arthropods including, but not limited to, scorpions, wasps and spiders [Zlotkin (1985) in Comprehensive Insect Physiology, Biochemistry and Pharmacology, I. Kerkut and L.I. Gilbert (eds.)
  • Figure 1A-1E presents nucleotide and amino acid sequences of signal sequences tested with the itch mite toxin coding sequences .
  • the signal sequences shown correspond to tox34 (Fig. 1A; nucleotides 12-56 of SEQ ID N ⁇ :l), sarcotoxin IA gene of S. peregrina (Fig. IB; SEQ ID N ⁇ :10), the cuticle gene of D. melanogaster (Fig. 1C; SEQ ID N ⁇ :12), tox21A from P. tri tici (Fig. ID; nucleotides 119-208 of SEQ ID N ⁇ :3) and a modified tox34 signal sequence (Fig IE; SEQ ID N ⁇ :14) .
  • each signal peptide is highlighted by a shaded box below its corresponding nucleotide sequence.
  • the mature N-terminus of tox34 is indicated by the amino acid residues in an open box.
  • a glycine residue was introduced onto the mature end of Tox34.
  • Half arrows indicate the location and direction of PCR primers used to generate tox34 with the tox21A signal sequence (Fig. ID) .
  • a shaded box in the nucleotide sequence of A shows the location of a complementary TAAG sequence which was mutated at the base pair marked by an asterisk in Fig. IE.
  • Figure 2A-2C presents schematic diagrams showing the polyhedrin gene region of baculovirus recombinants expressing tox34 with alternate signal sequences (Fig. 2A) ; under control of different promoters (Fig. 2B) ; and with a modified native tox34 signal sequence (Fig 2C) .
  • the name of each virus is shown on the left. All recombinant viruses contain the toxin gene inserted into the AcMNPV genome upstream of and in the opposite orientation to the polyhedrin gene (polh) and its promoter (PP) .
  • the signal sequence (labeled above) and promoter used to drive toxin expression (labeled below with arrow) are shown for each recombinant .
  • Figure 3 illustrates the effect of different insect signal sequences on expression and secretion of Tox34 in SF-21 cells.
  • Cell lysates (lanes 1 to 6) or supernatants (lanes 7 to 12) from SF-21 cells infected with the indicated viruses were harvested at 48 h post infection (p.i.) and the proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and visualized by immunoblotting.
  • Figures 4A-4B illustrate the effects of different promoters on Tox34 expression and secretion in TN-368 cells.
  • Cell lysates (Fig. 4A) or supernatants (Fig. 4B) from TN-368 cells infected with the indicated viruses were harvested at the indicated times post infection. Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, blotted onto a membrane and probed with antibody directed against Tox34. Tox34 and its precursor (pTox34) form are indicated on the right .
  • Figure 5 provides a comparison of the secreted levels of Tox34 from vDA26tox34- or vHSP70tox34-infected SF-21 or TN-368 cells.
  • SF-21 (lanes 1 to 10) or TN-368 (lanes 11 to 20) cells were infected with vDA26tox34 or vHSP70tox34, and supernatants were collected at the indicated times p.i. Proteins in the supernatant fractions were concentrated, separated by SDS-PAGE and blotted onto a membrane. Tox34 was detected using an antibody specific for purified Tox34.
  • Figs. 6A-6B illustrates the effects of the complementary TAAG sequence in the native tox34 signal sequence on expression and secretion of the Tox34 protein.
  • Proteins in cell lysates (Fig. 6A) or supernatants (Fig. 6B) from TN-368 cells infected with the indicated viruses at 18, 24 and 48 h p.i. were separated by SDS-PAGE, transferred onto membranes, and probed with anti-Tox34 antibody.
  • FIG. 7 is a diagram showing the plasmid transfer vectors used to construct recombinant HzSNPV viruses .
  • Plasmid pHzEGT contains a complete egt gene while all others contain deletions and/or insertions in the e/t gene.
  • Viral sequences were inserted at the EcoRI site of pBluescript KS on the left while the junction at the right is a fusion of a viral Sail site and the vector Xhol site. Restriction sites indicated with the viral DNA inserts are Sail (S) , Bsu36I (Bsu) and Sse8387I ( Sse) .
  • Promoters hsp70, DA26 or p6.9 are shown by shaded or dark boxes while the foreign gene insert (GUS or tox34 ) are indicated by open boxes .
  • Figure 8 shows the results for an assay of EGT activity in the culture supernatants removed from infected Hz cells.
  • Cells were either mock infected or infected with HzSNPV or AcNPV.
  • UDP-glucose (Glc) or UDP-galactose (Gal) were used as substrates.
  • the products of the reactions were separated from the substrates by thin layer chromatography.
  • the position of the [ 3 H] ecdysone substrate is indicated (E) on the right as are the positions of the ecdysone-glucose (E-Glc) or ecdysone-galactose (E-Gal) products.
  • Figure 9B provides the nucleotide sequence of the 5' end of a 2.1 kB Clal fragment of Hln lll-C which contains the Bsu36I site (SEQ ID NO:22).
  • Figures 10A-10B provide the nucleotide sequence of HzSNPV egt gene and the deduced amino acid sequence.
  • the predicted translation start and stop codons and a potential polyadenylation site are in bold type.
  • the Sail sites within the EGT coding sequences are indicated by double underlining. See also SEQ ID NOS: 23 AND 24.
  • Figure 11A is a phylogenetic tree of baculovirus ecdysteroid glycosyl transferases for which sequence information is available.
  • the single most parsimonious tree with length of 1538 and a consistency index of 0.81 was constructed using the Branch and Bound Search program of Paup 3.1 [Swofford, D.L. (1993) Phylogenetic analysis using parsimony. Version 3.1, computer program distributed by the Illinois Natural History Survey, Champaign, IL] . Numbers above the lines are the number of changes between the node and virus, while the underlined numbers below the lines indicate the frequency of that cluster after bootstrap analysis with 100 replicates.
  • Figure 11B presents aligned amino acid sequences of baculovirus ecdysteroid UDP glucosyl transferases .
  • the EGT sequences analyzed include those of AcMNPV [O'Reilly and Miller (1990) J. Virol . 64. : 1321-1328] ; Buzura suppressaria NPV, BsSNPV [Hu et al . (1997) Virus Res . 4_7: 91-97] ; Bombyx mori NPV, BmNPV [Genbank Accession No. L33180] ; Choristoneura fumiferana NPV, CfMNPV and its associated defective virus, CfD ⁇ F [Barrett et al . (1995) J. Gen .
  • the toxin genes expressed are those from insect-parasitic mites such as those of the genus Pyemotes, particularly those from ventricosus group of the Pyemotes.
  • the insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin coding sequence is Tox34 derived from Pyemotes tri tici ; this coding sequence is provided in SEQ ID N ⁇ :l; a second specific embodiment of an insect paralytic neurotoxin coding sequence is termed Tox21a herein (SEQ ID N ⁇ :3; amino acid sequence, SEQ ID N ⁇ :4), also from Pyemotes tri tici .
  • insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin coding sequences from mites can be isolated and identified by nucleotide sequence homology, as determined in hybridization experiments [See, e.g., Hames and Higgins (1985) Nucleic Acid Hybridization, IRL Press, Washington, DC] employing sequence information provided herein.
  • Insect-specific paralytic toxin coding sequences from insect-predacious mites which have at least 70% nucleotide sequence homology to the coding sequence in SEQ ID N ⁇ :l and which encode toxins with substantially similar biology activity in insects are within the scope of the present invention.
  • a preferred heat shock promoter is the Drosophila melanogaster hsp70 promoter.
  • HzSNPV derivatives cause insect paralysis and death sooner than those constructs in which a mite toxin coding sequence is expressed under the control of very late promoters such as the polyhedrin promoter.
  • baculoviruses for insect control other than the exemplified AcMNPV and HzSNPV can be produced using the teachings of the present Specification taken with what is well known to the art.
  • Toxins other than those encoded by the tox34 and tox21a coding sequences can be inserted under the regulatory control of a heat shock promoter, preferably the hsp70 promoter or 6. 9K or a DA26 promoter promoter as disclosed herein to produce killing properties when compared with baculoviruses in which the toxin coding sequences are inserted under the regulatory control of late or very late promoters .
  • the invention also includes a recombinant DNA molecule comprising a coding sequence for an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin wherein said encoded insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin is expressed under the regulatory control of a heat shock promoter, preferably from an animal, more preferably from an insect, especially the Drosophila hsp70 promoter or the AcMNPV 6. 9K promoter.
  • a heat shock promoter preferably from an animal, more preferably from an insect, especially the Drosophila hsp70 promoter or the AcMNPV 6. 9K promoter.
  • a DA26 promoter can also be used.
  • the hsp70 promoter is highly expressed in insect cells from a wide variety of species.
  • genetically engineered baculoviruses expressing an insect-specific toxin under the regulatory control of this promoter are surprisingly improved in the time at which paralysis occurs and in terms of the insect species in which such a genetically engineered baculovirus is effective as an insect control agent .
  • Particularly preferred embodiments of such a genetically modified baculovirus are those AcMNPV and HzSNPV derivatives which are occluded; preoccluded viruses are also useful in insect toxic compositions and methods for control of insect pests using same.
  • a nonoccluded nuclear polyhedrosis or granulosis virus derivative the skilled artisan understands how to construct an analogous occluded virus without the expense of undue experimentation. Since there is significant homology among some genes of different baculoviruses, the skilled artisan will also understand how to insert the toxin gene, fused to an appropriate promoter, into the genomes of other baculoviruses in similar nonessential locations.
  • the invention includes a baculovirus which has been genetically modified to contain and express a gene encoding an insect- specific toxin, preferably a paralytic neurotoxin, under the regulatory control of a promoter which allows strong gene expression at a time relatively early after infection, especially as compared with other promoters such as that of the polyhedrin gene .
  • the invention also provides a baculovirus which has been genetically modified to contain and express a coding sequence for an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin of a mite of the genus Pyemotes , specifically from a mite of the species Pyemotes tri tici .
  • a specifically exemplified toxin coding sequence has a nucleotide sequence as given in SEQ ID N ⁇ :l from an aspartate encoded at about nucleotide 120 to a cysteine encoded at about nucleotide 873.
  • An alternative coding sequence for an insect-specific neurotoxin of an insect-predacious mite is that as shown in SEQ ID NO: 3, from an aspartate encoded at about nucleotide 120 to a cysteine encoded at about nucleotide 873. Also within the scope of the present invention are mite toxin coding sequences having at least about 70% nucleotide sequence identity to the exemplified coding sequences as provided in
  • the baculovirus derivative is an NPV baculovirus, specifically, an AcMNPV derivative or an HzSNPV derivative.
  • Another object of the invention is an insect-toxic composition
  • an insect-toxic composition comprising an insect-toxic amount of a baculovirus, genetically engineered to express an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin at a level that results in a toxic effect on a targeted insect, and an agriculturally or otherwise environmentally acceptable carrier.
  • Such compositions can be employed for protection of plants from insect pests.
  • Preferred control agents are those which express an insect- specific paralytic neurotoxin gene from an insect-parasitic mite, and particularly those mites of the genus Pyemotes . It is preferred that the baculovirus particles are present in the occluded or preocculuded form.
  • the baculovirus derivative is an AcMNPV derivative or an HzSNPV derivative
  • the recombinant baculovirus expresses an insect-specific toxin at an insect-toxic or insect-paralyzing level at a time sooner than that enabled by prior art viruses. It is a further object of the invention to provide a method for the biological control of an insect pest comprising the step of applying an insect-toxic composition which contains an insect-toxic amount of a baculovirus which has been genetically engineered to express an insect-selective toxin gene such as an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin gene from an insect-parasitic mite in an effective amount at a time earlier than enabled by prior art viruses.
  • Such an insect-toxic composition is applied in the vicinity of a targeted insect, an insect habitat or to an area, plant or environment that is to be protected from the insect pest .
  • the amount of said baculovirus derivative in said composition and the level of expression of said toxin coding sequence the baculovirus are such that said composition produces a toxic effect in a targeted insect, resulting in a reduction or, more preferably, a cessation of feeding.
  • Preferred baculovirus derivatives include AcMNPV derivatives and HzSNPV derivatives .
  • the occluded forms of genetically altered nuclear polyhedrosis viruses are most useful in the present invention. The skilled artisan understands that the genetically altered virus expressing the insect toxin may itself be capable of occlusion or that occlusion may be achieved by other means, e.g., by coinfection with an occlusion-positive virus.
  • Useful promoters for toxin coding sequence expression include the heat shock promoters, preferably those from the animal kingdom, more preferably from an insect, and desirably from the hsp70 , hsp83 , hsp22 and hsp23 gene families, e.g., a D. melanogaster hsp70 promoter.
  • Particularly preferred for use in the control of insect-specific toxin gene expression are those heat shock promoters which are relatively strongly constitutively expressed.
  • a number of heat shock promoter sequences are well known and available to the art .
  • the insect toxin coding sequence is expressed under the regulatory control of the Drosophila melanogaster hsp70 promoter or the
  • the invention includes a method for the control of insect pests comprising the step of applying an insect-toxic amount of the inse ⁇ ticidal composition of the present invention to a habitat of said insect pests, for example, to plants.
  • baculoviruses which are genetically altered to express an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin coding sequence, which are effective against insect pests other than those which attack or are harmful to plants .
  • Such an agent can be incorporated into insect-toxic, insect-paralytic, or insecticidal compositions along with environmentally acceptable carriers as understood in the art, and can be used in a method to control a target insect pest susceptible to the particular baculovirus employed.
  • baculoviruses known to specifically infect each of mosquitoes and fleas. See, Beard et al . (1989) J. Invertebra te Path . 54: 128-131 and Federici (1980) Virology 100:1-9.
  • the target insect guides the ordinary skilled artisan in the selection of the particular baculovirus modified to express paralytic toxin.
  • insecticidal compositions and methods of the present invention are those baculoviruses in which an insect-specific neurotoxin coding sequence is expressed and in which an ecdysteroid UDP-glycosyl transferase gene has been inactivated.
  • a biological insect control agent is an agent effective in the control of insect pests.
  • insect control agents include baculoviruses which have been genetically modified to express an insect-specific toxin, preferably an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin, in a way that leads to a cessation of feeding, insect paralysis or insect death at a time sooner than prior art baculoviruses due to the use of promoters which promote higher levels of toxin gene expression and at a time earlier than with previously described baculoviruses .
  • Control can refer to limitation of feeding behavior or to killing of an insect pest.
  • a biological insect control agent of the present invention has an insect-toxic effect that is attributable at least in part to the expression of an insect-specific toxin coding sequence.
  • An insect-toxic effect relates to any adverse effect on a targeted insect and is observable as paralysis and/or killing of that insect or as a change in normal behavior of the targeted insect such as in feeding behavior, righting response or other stereotypic behaviors. This toxic effect occurs due to early and efficient expression of such a toxin coding sequence .
  • Insect-predacious mites are those mites which feed on insects. Many of such mites inject venom into the insect hosts on which they feed. Such venom contains insect-specific paralytic neurotoxins to immobilize the host insects. Mites expressing insect-specific paralytic toxin genes include those within the ventricosus group including P. anobii , P. beckeri , P. emerginatus, P . schwerdtfegeri , P. tu ⁇ >erculatus, P. tri tici , P . ventricosus and P. zwoelferi .
  • An insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin is a polypeptide which causes paralysis of a sensitive insect larva or adult, but has no significant toxic effect on other organisms. The paralytic effect may initially be observed as an effect on mobility or other behaviors of the insect, including feeding behavior. Insect-specific neurotoxins are those which adversely affect insects, and have negligible effects on higher animals, especially mammals.
  • the insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin of this invention is specifically exemplified by Tox34 and Tox21a, and/or the TxP-I and TxP-II proteins produced by P. tri tici .
  • a toxin that is functionally equivalent to the neurotoxins of this invention effects a similar muscle contractile paralysis in insects as is caused by Tox34 and Tox21a. It is well known in the biological arts that certain amino acid substitutions can be made in protein sequences without affecting the function of the protein. Generally, conservative amino acid substitutions or substitutions of similar amino acids are tolerated without affecting protein function. Similar amino acids can be those that are similar in size and/or charge properties, for example, aspartate and glutamate and isoleucine and valine are both pairs of similar amino acids. Similarity between amino acid pairs has been assessed in the art in a number of ways.
  • insect-specific paralytic neurotoxins as defined herein include polypeptides with portions of amino acid sequences with substantial identity to Tox34 or Tox21a or polypeptides which themselves are a portion of a full length TxP-I protein or which have the amino acid sequence of a Tox34 or Tox21a protein into which an insertion has been made, and which retain the biological activity, in these examples, contractile muscle paralysis.
  • Insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin genes may be found in insect-predacious mites, including but not limited to those listed in Table 1, particularly those within the ventricosus group, or in other insect parasites or predators.
  • Genes homologous to the tox34 and tox21a genes of the present invention may be identified in mites or other sources by nucleic acid hybridization to sequences disclosed in the present invention or by cross-reaction of toxin molecules with antibody specific for the toxins of the present invention or by any other means known to the art, including the use of PCR technology carried out using oligonucleotides corresponding to conserved or unambiguous regions of the toxin gene(s) exemplified herein.
  • any insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin gene may be identified and that gene expressed in a baculovirus vector.
  • Biological activity of the expressed protein can be readily determined and similarly, the efficacy of such a genetically modified vector can be assessed using the teachings of the present invention in combination with techniques well known to the art.
  • insect-specific toxins include those from scorpions and spiders [see, e.g., Bougis et al. (1988) in Proc . World Congress on Animal Natural Toxins, pp. 94-101; EP 417,906; and EP 507,207].
  • a recombinant DNA molecule does not occur in nature, and it is one which has been produced either by natural processes using known methods and directed by man to produce a desired result or artificially produced from parts derived from heterologous sources, which parts may be naturally occurring or chemically synthesized molecules, and wherein those parts have been joined by ligation or other means known to the art.
  • Genetically modified to contain and express an insect-specific toxin gene means that nucleotide sequences encoding such a protein and directing its synthesis are introduced into a baculovirus genome so that the modified baculoviruses can produce that neurotoxin protein. Any means known to the art may be used to insert the expressible neurotoxin gene into a particular baculovirus.
  • promoter and/or promoter-associated sequences direct gene expression, i.e., control transcription and translation of a nucleotide sequence encoding an insect-specific toxin in the infected target insect.
  • promoters are heat shock promoters such as those from the hsp70 , hsp83 , hsp22 and hsp23 gene families, especially the Drosophila melanogaster hsp70 promoter, and the AcMNPV (or other baculovirus) 6. 9K promoter.
  • a baculovirus DA26 promoter can be used.
  • HzSNPV was registered and commercially produced as a pesticide (ElcarTM) by Sandoz Corp. to control infestations of the cotton bollworm [Ignoffo, CM. (1981) Living Microbial insecticides. In: Essays in Applied Microbiology (eds. J.R. Norris and M.H. Richmond) John Wiley & Sons, New York, pp. 2-31] .
  • This product did not compete successfully with the newly introduced pyrethroid pesticides.
  • the poor field performance of ElcarTM was due, in part, to the slow rate that the virus killed the insect pest compared to contact chemical pesticides; the delay between virus application and insect death can result in significant crop damage [reviewed by Miller, L.K. (1995) J. Invertebr. Pathol . 65:211-216] .
  • the art understands how to insert an expressible gene into a viral genome at a site which does not interfere with viral replicative functions.
  • the skilled artisan can select a promoter with desired strength and temporal expression to drive the expression of an insect-specific toxin gene in a desired baculovirus vector.
  • the target insect dictates the virus selected, and the particular virus to be engineered will guide the skilled artisan in the selection of an appropriate promoter .
  • promoters have been used to control the expression heterologous coding sequences in recombinant baculovirus systems.
  • the three classes of viral promoters for viruses such as AcMNPV are early, late and very late promoters [see, e.g., Morris and Miller (1992) J. Virol . 6j5: 7397-7405] .
  • Early promoters include the ETL promoter of
  • Very late promoters include the polyhedrin and a synthetic promoter [U.S. Patent No. 5,244,805, L. Miller, issued 1993] and the modified polyhedrin promoter LSXIV [Ooi et al . (1989) J. Molec . Biol . 210:721-736; U.S. Patent No. 5,244,805 (L. Miller, issued 1993].
  • Very late baculovirus promoters include the polyhedrin and plO promoters [Kelly and Lescott (1981) Microbiologica 4:35-57; Miller, L.K. (1988) Ann . Rev. Microbiol . 42.: 172-199; Bonning et al. (1994) J. Gen . Microbiol . 25:1551-1556]. See also Thiem and Miller (1990) Gene .9JL: 87-94 for further discussion of late and very late gene expression. See also The Baculoviruses, ed. , L.K. Miller, Plenum Press, New York, 1997.
  • a heat shock promoter with a significant level of constitutive expression of a downstream, operably linked coding sequence is exemplified by hsp70 promoters, in particular, the D . melanogaster hsp70 promoter [See, e.g., Toerek and Karch (1980) Nucl . Acids Res . 8 . :3105-3123] .
  • This promoter has been used for the expression of heterologous coding sequences in recombinant baculovirus vectors with varying degrees of success [Morris and Miller (1992) supra] .
  • a recombinant DNA molecule is produced via human intervention, and it contains nucleotide sequences which in nature are not covalently joined or associated.
  • Chemical synthesis or in vi tro enzyme ligation can effect the joining, or recombination can be accomplished where the input sequences are introduced into a single cell in the laboratory and predicted resulting progeny are analyzed and purified.
  • an insect control agent is a composition or the active ingredient of a composition which has an adverse affect on insect pests. Feeding by insects is reduced in response to the genetically engineered baculoviruses of the present invention as a result of the expressed toxin, and death of the insect follows.
  • An insect control agent of this invention preferably is an insect virus genetically engineered to express a heterologous gene encoding an insect-specific toxin. Specific examples of such toxin proteins include, but are not limited to, Tox34 and Tox21a, with the amino acid sequences disclosed in SEQ ID NO : 2 and SEQ ID NO : 4 , respectively, as well as known scorpion and spider toxins .
  • cosmid plasmid clones corresponding to regions flanking the polh gene were screened by PCR using degenerate oligonucleotide primers which were constructed based on consensus sequences from conserved regions of the egt gene.
  • PCR amplication using an HzSNPV cosmid which spanned Hindlll-J through -E fragments and a plasmid clone containing the ffindlll-C fragment as templates generated a PCR product of the size expected for the egt gene.
  • One of the PCR products was cloned and sequenced and found to contain a portion of the egt gene .
  • HzSNPV egt The sequences generated were used to prepare oligonucleotide primers which allowed the sequencing of the entire HzSNPV egt gene .
  • the egrt gene was located entirely within the E ⁇ oRI Q fragment (Fig. 9A) and is transcribed from the same strand as the polh and IE1 genes.
  • the DNA sequence of HzSNPV egt is presented in Fig. 10A-10B; see also SEQ ID NOs : 23 and 24.
  • the percent sequence identity and similarity of HzSNPV EGT with other known EGTs are presented in Table 7, and Fig. 11 presents a phylogenetic tree based on amino acid sequence comparisons of several baculoviral egt genes .
  • the HzSNPV genome was found to have no Sse8387I sites and a single Bsu36I site which was located within the Hindlll-C fragment (Fig. 9A) .
  • the sequence surrounding this restriction site was determined (Fig. 9B) .
  • the region contained no open reading frames
  • ORFS ORFS of 50 codons or more and exhibited no homology with other known viral genes by computer analysis. This site was eliminated from the virus genome by restriction digestion, filling-in the 3 bp cohesive ends, and religation. The infectivity and virulence of the resulting virus lacking the Bsu36I site, HzSNPV (Bsu36I' ) , was determined by measuring the LC 50 s and ET 50 s, respectively, in H. zea neonates .
  • Duplicate LC 50 assays (Tables 6 and 7) showed that the elimination of the Bsu36I site had little or no effect on the infectivity of the virus, and duplicate ET 50 assays (Tables 8 and 9) showed that the virulence of the modified virus was also essentially unaltered.
  • Bsu36I' virus was then used for the construction of all subsequent virus constructions since the ability to insert genes into the viral genome by direct cloning offers a rapid and useful means of constructing viral recombinants [Ernst et al . (1994) Nucl . Acids Res . 2_2.:2855-2856; Lu and Miller (1996) Biotechniques 2JL-.63-68] and insertion of Bsu36I and Sse8387I sites into the egt region of the Bsu36I' virus simplifies direct cloning into this region.
  • the next step in genetically engineering HzSNPV was to insert a marker gene, the E. coli GUS gene, into the egt gene of HzSNPV and screen for viruses which produced a blue color in the presence of the GUS indicator, X-Gluc (see Example 4) .
  • This virus was then used as a parental virus to construct additional HzSNPV recombinants using the presence of white plaques as a screen for double-crossover recombinants in allelic replacement.
  • An egt deletion virus, three tox34-expressing recombinant viruses and an egt deletion virus containing Bsu36I and Sse8387I sites within the egt locus were constructed by allelic replacement using the appropriate transfer plasmids (see Fig. 7) .
  • Each of the tox34-expressing recombinants contained a different promoter: the D . melanogaster hsp70 promoter, the early AcMNPV DA26 (ORF 16) viral promoter or the late AcMNPV p6.9 gene (ORF 100) promoter.
  • the recombinant expressing tox34 under the control of the viral DA26 promoter exhibited a lower ET 50 than the recombinant containing the tox34 gene under the control of the Drosophila hsp70 promoter in this species.
  • the AcMNPV p6.9 promoter also consistently performed better than the hsp70 promoter and was similar to, although possibly slightly less effective than, the AcMNPV DA26 promoter.
  • the VEGTDA26 tox34 virus decreased the ET 50 to less than 40 h, 40% less than wt HzSNPV.
  • the ET 50 s for HzEGTdel was not lower than those for HzSNPV wt and HzSNPV (Bsu36I') .
  • the HzSNPV egt gene is located between 93.1 and 94.5 m.u. of the
  • HzSNPV map and is predicted to encode a 515 amino acid polypeptide with less than 50% sequence identity with other known baculovirus EGTs. Like other baculovirus egt gene products [O'Reilly et al . (1992) Insect Biochem . Molec . Biol . ,2_2: 313-320] , it is predicted to have a cleavable signal sequence at its amino-terminus and lacks a C-terminal transmembrane domain.
  • the HzSNPV EGT has the seven amino acids which are found to be absolutely conserved among all EGTs and UDP-glycosyltransferases [O'Reilly, D.R. (1995) Insect . Biochem .
  • the DA26 promoter was less effective in reducing the ET 50 of AcMNPV in these two species than the polh, p6.9 or hsp70 promoters.
  • the most effective viral promoter was AcMNPV DA26 although it was only slightly more effective than the AcMNPV p6.9 promoter.
  • melanogaster hsp70 promoter was somewhat less effective under these conditions than either the hsp70 or DA26 promoters. Both early and late AcMNPV promoters were effective in the context of the HzSNPV genome. Without wishing to be bound by theory, it is predicted that the equivalent HzSNPV promoters are as or more effective than the AcMNPV promoters .
  • HzSNPV as a pesticide through genetic engineering technology to provide the first recombinant HzSNPV.
  • ET 50 of less than 40 hrs
  • the HzDA26tox34 recombinant is the fastest acting baculovirus reported to date .
  • Genetically engineered HzSNPV derivatives are also useful as gene expression vectors.
  • TxP-I is synthesized as a precursor protein of 291 amino acids; the first 39 amino acids are a signal sequence absent from the mature secreted product. Since mature Tox34 is a secreted protein that must interact with the secretory pathway of infected insect cells, we investigated the influence of different signal peptides on expression and secretion of Tox34.
  • FIG. 3 Western blot analysis using polyclonal antibody specific for Tox34 (Fig. 3) .
  • Intracellular levels of toxin produced at 48 h p.i. varied (Fig. 3, lanes 1-6).
  • Expression from vSp-BSigtox34 produced less intracellular toxin protein (Fig. 3, compare lanes 2 and 3) while vSp- DCtox34 and vSp-tox34 infected-cells produced similar amounts of intracellular toxin (Fig. 3, compare lanes 2 and 4).
  • intracellular levels of toxin in vSp-tox21A/tox34 infected cells were approximately 3-fold higher than in vSP-tox34 infected cells (Fig. 3, lanes 2 and 5) .
  • the low levels of secreted toxin from vSp-BSigtox34 infected cells is believed due to translational or post-translational problems since the levels of the toxin transcripts appear to be similar.
  • the additional glycine residue added to the N-terminal sequence of the mature toxin may be responsible for this effect.
  • Neonate T. ni larvae were infected per os with occluded virus from each recombinant virus to evaluate the effect of changing the signal sequence of tox34 on the LC 50 (concentration of occluded virus required to kill 50% of the test insects) and the ET 50 (time required to paralyze or kill 50% of the test insects) of each recombinant virus
  • tox34 does not compromise ability to initiate infection relative to wild-type.
  • per os infection of T. ni larvae by tox34 expressing viruses resulted in paralysis.
  • vSp-tox34 and vSp-DCtox34 infected larvae were paralyzed approximately 50% faster than wild-type AcMNPV, vSp-tox21A and vSp- tox21A/tox34 about 35% faster than wild-type, and vSp-BSigtox34 about 25% faster.
  • the ET 50 values for vSp-tox34 and vSp-DCtox34 correlate well with the levels of toxin detected in the supernatants of infected cells; however, the ET 50 of vSp-tox21A/tox34 was longer than vSp-tox34 and vSp- DCtox34 even though similar levels of toxin were secreted. This suggests that not all of the secreted toxin from vSp-tox21A/Tox34 infected cells is biologically active. Although no toxin was found in the supernatant from vSp-BSigtox34 infected cells, neonate T.
  • Protected probe corresponding to transcriptional initiation within the TAAG motif of the P synXIV promoter was observed as early as 12 h p.i., and continued to increase through 36 h p.i., with RNA prepared from both vSp- BSigtox34- and vSp-tox34-infected cells.
  • the amount of protected probe at each time point was similar between the two viruses, indicating that the low level of toxin produced in vSp-BSigtox34 infected cells was not due to reduced transcription.
  • vHSP70tox34 melanogaster HSP70 promoter
  • vDA26tox34 the early AcMNPV DA26 gene promoter
  • vp6.9tox34 the late AcMNPV 6.9K DNA binding protein gene promoter
  • vSp-tox34 the very late P synXIV promoter
  • Tox34 in vDA26tox34-infected cells were too low to detect in either intracellular or extracellular fractions (Figs. 4A and 4B, lanes 11 to 15) .
  • vp6. tox34-infected cells showed the highest expression of Tox34 of all promoters tested, and substantial levels of Tox34 were detected in both fractions at both 24 and 48 h p.i. (Figs. 4A and 4B, lanes 19 and 20) .
  • Expression of Tox34 in vp6.9tox34-infected cells was at least 24 h earlier than tox34 under very late promoter control, where Tox34 was not detected until 48 h p.i. (Figs.
  • SI nuclease analysis revealed that a transcriptional start site was located on the complementary strand within the native tox34 signal sequence. Transcripts initiating from this site could potentially form duplex RNA with tox34 transcripts in infected cells to interfere with the translation of tox34 .
  • Oligonucleotide site-directed mutagenesis was performed on pSp- tox34 and pSp-p6.9tox34 to change the CTTAA motif to a CTTGA motif (See Fig. IE) within the tox34 signal coding sequence without altering the amino acid sequence of the signal peptide.
  • the effect of this altered signal peptide coding sequence was tested using recombinant virus expressing the modified tox34 gene ( tox34m) under 6.9K (vp6.9tox34m) or P synXIV (vSp-tox34m) promoter control. Cell lysates and supernatants were examined for Tox34 or Tox34m expression from 18 to 48 h p.i. (Figs.
  • RNA initiating from this promoter primarily effects translation from tox34 expressed from the late 6.9K promoter.
  • vp6.9tox34 No differences in the extracellular levels of Tox34 were observed between vp6.9tox34 and vp6.9tox34m infected cells (Fig. 5B) . It is possible that the level of Tox34 produced in vp6.9tox34-infected cells has overwhelmed the cell's secretory pathway so that even higher levels of precursor Tox34 produced in vp6.9tox34m infected cells do not affect the level of secreted Tox34.
  • vp6.9tox34m and vSp-tox34m were also used in per os infection of neonate S. frugiperda and T. ni larvae to determine whether there were any differences in the LC 50 and ET 50 of these recombinant viruses. No differences were observed in the LC 50 s of each virus in either species relative to wild-type AcMNPV (Table 6).
  • the ET 50 of vp6.9tox34m was moderately longer than vp6.9tox34 by 4.5 and 5.6 h in S . frugiperda and T. ni larvae, respectively, and was just outside the limits of standard error.
  • vSp-tox34m performed better than vSp-tox34 in both species. Its effect seemed to be greater in S. frugiperda larvae, decreasing the time to paralysis by about 7 h.
  • the major effect of changing the signal sequence was to affect the intracellular levels of Tox34.
  • the levels of toxin in vSp- tox21A/tox34 infected cells accumulated to a higher level than in vSp- tox34 infected cells at 48 h p.i., suggesting that the tox21A signal sequence was less efficient at directing the secretion of Tox34 than the native tox34 signal sequence.
  • Very low amounts of toxin were detected in vSp-BSigtox34 infected cells even though similar levels of toxin transcripts were found in vSp-BSigtox34 and vSp-tox34 infected cells.
  • Tox34 may be affected as a result of the change in the signal sequence or the N-terminal residue of the mature polypeptide.
  • This signal sequence has been used successfully to promote the secretion of active prothoracicotropic hormone using the baculovirus expression system [O'Reilly et al . (1995) supra].
  • the addition of an extra glycine residue to the amino terminus of the mature Tox34 may have destabilized rather than stabilized Tox34.
  • toxin-expressing recombinant viruses (regardless of promoter) reduced the effective time to paralysis/mortality relative to wild-type AcMNPV.
  • the most effective viral promoter in the two species tested was the late 6.9K DNA binding protein gene promoter of AcMNPV.
  • Tox34 under control of the early DA26 promoter was the least effective in both species, a result also found with another early promoter (ETL) of AcMNPV [Tomalski and Miller (1992) supra] .
  • ETL early promoter
  • the results indicate that although tox34 is expressed earlier in these cells, it is not initially expressed at the threshold level needed to paralyze larvae.
  • the hsp70 promoter has been shown to be a relatively strong promoter when compared to early viral promoters [Morris and Miller (1992) J. Virol . £6:7397-7405] and this promoter was found to drive higher levels of tox34 expression than the DA26 promoter in both
  • tox34 expressed under the control of the hsp70 promoter resulted in the shortest ET 50 in S. frugiperda larvae, even through overall levels of Tox34 secreted under the hsplO promoter were substantially lower than tox34 expressed under 6. 9K promoter control. This indicates that tox34 expression from a strong constitutive promoter can, in at least some cases, be more effective than expression from a strong late viral promoter.
  • ET 50 values for vHSP70tox34 and vDA26tox34 in the two species suggests that the effectiveness of a particular promoter is host-dependent .
  • Baculoviruses are being considered to fill this need, but most baculoviruses require from four to fourteen days to kill their insect hosts, and during this time the insects continue to feed and effect significant damage to crops and other vegetation. Genetic modifications of baculovirus genomes have resulted in certain improvements of baculoviruses as insect control agents by reducing the time to mortality in infected insects. The expression of insect predacious mite toxins which are specific for insects by recombinant baculoviruses has led to reduction of feeding time in infected insects; the present invention provides further improvement in such baculoviruses.
  • Insecticidal compositions suitable for applications to plants to control insect pests comprise an agriculturally suitable carrier and an insect control agent.
  • Application of an insecticidal composition of this invention can protect plants from insect pests by reducing feeding by and killing of susceptible insects.
  • an insect control agent e.g. , an insect virus, which is suitable for the control of a particular insect pest. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the insect pests can be exposed to the insect control agent of the present invention by conventional methods including ingestion, inhalation or direct contact of the insect control agent.
  • a primary use of the genetically engineered baculoviruses of the present invention will be as components of agricultural compositions for applying to plants, plant environments or distributed in baits to effect the biological control of insect pests . It will also be possible to use the insect control agents of the present invention in the control of other insect pests with the appropriate choice of the particular organism genetically modified to express an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin. For example, there are baculoviruses known to specifically infect each of mosquitoes, beetles and fleas, besides the common Lepidopterans . The target insect guides the skilled artisan in the selection of the insect control agent expressing the paralytic toxin, and the particular agent constrains the selection of an appropriate promoter sequence . Many variations of preparing such agriculturally suitable and/or environmentally acceptable compositions for insect control are known in the art .
  • the concentration of the genetically engineered baculovirus required to produce insecticidally effective compositions for the control of an insect pest depends on the type of organism and neurotoxin used and the formulation of the composition.
  • the insecticidally effective concentration of the insect control agent within the composition can readily be determined experimentally, as understood by the skilled artisan.
  • the insecticidally effective concentration of a virus can be readily determined using bioassay techniques known to the art.
  • agricultural compositions for control of insect pests of plants must be suitable for agricultural use and dispersal in fields. Similarly, compositions for the control of other insect pests must be environmentally acceptable. Generally, components of the composition must be non-phytotoxic and not detrimental to the integrity of the occluded virus. Foliar applications must not damage or injure plant leaves.
  • agricultural compositions may include sticking and adhesive agents, emulsifying and wetting agents, but no components which deter insect feeding or any viral functions. It may also be desirable to add components which protect the insect control agent from UV inactivation or components which serve as adjuvants to increase the potency and/or virulence of an entomopathogen .
  • Agricultural compositions for insect pest control may also include agents which stimulate insect feeding.
  • Monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies preferably monoclonal, specifically reacting with a toxin protein encoded by a particular coding sequence identified using the present methods may be made by methods known in the art. See, e.g., Harlow and Lane (1988) Antibodies : A Laboratory Manual , Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Plainview, NY and Goding (1986) Monoclonal Antibodies : Principles and Practice, 2d ed. , Academic Press, New York.
  • AcMNPV viruses are originally derived from AcMNPV L-l [Lee and Miller (1978) J. Virol . 22:754], and are plaque-purified and propagated in Spodoptera frugiperda IPLB-SF-21 cells (Sf cells,
  • Recombinant viruses vSptox34 and vHSP70tox34 contain the tox34 coding sequence expressed under the regulatory control of the synthetic hybrid viral promoter P synXIV [Wang et al . (1991) Gene 100:131-137] and the Drosophila melanogaster hsp70, respectively [Tomalski and Miller (1992) Bio/Technology 1CI545-549; McNitt et al . (1995) Bio . Control
  • vHSP70tox34 was constructed starting with pEVptox34 digested with EcoRI and Bglll to release a tox34 fragment (see U.S. Patent No. 5,266,317) and plasmid pHSP70PLVl+CAT [Morris and Miller (1992) J " . Virol . £6:7397-7405] which was digested with EcoRI and Bglll to produce a vector fragment and a cat fragment, which is discarded.
  • the vector fragment contains the D. melanogaster hsp70 promoter with sequence from about -500 to +231 [see Toeroek and Karch (1980) Nucl . Acids Res . 8 . : 3105-3123] . Insertion of the Tox34 coding sequence in the proper orientation was confirmed by restriction endonuclease analysis (digests with Xbal, Ndel, and a double digest with EcoRI and Bglll) .
  • the resulting transfer plasmid was cotransfected into SF21 cells with DNA of the virus vSynVl-gal, an AcMNPV derivative containing lac ZI in place of pohl .
  • Recombinant viruses were identified by their white, occulusion-positive phenotype on Xgal plates, and their genotype was confirmed by restriction endonuclease analysis.
  • Recombinant virus vSp- tox21A expresses the tox21A coding sequence, a homolog of the tox34 coding sequence also isolated by cDNA cloning from Pyemotes tri tici insect-predacious mites, under the regulatory control of the P Syn x ⁇ v
  • HzUNDK cells (2 x 10 6 per 60 mm dish) were infected with wt HzSNPV or AcMNPV at a multiplicity of infection of 10. After 48 h post-infection the infected cell culture supernatant was collected and transferase activity was assayed using 100 ⁇ l of supernatant with [ 3 H] ecdysone (Dupont, NEN Research Products) and UDP-galactose or UDP- glucose serving as the substrate [O'Reilly et al . (1992) Insect Biochem . Molec . Biol . 22 . : 313-320] . Ecdysone was separated from ecdysone-sugar conjugates by thin layer chromatography on silica gel plates, and the radiolabel was detected by autoradiography.
  • Example 3 Identification and Sequencing- of the HzSNPV egt Gene A cosmid library of the HzSNPV genome was constructed using
  • N is all four nucleotides) of the primers included a 5' terminal BamHI or EcoRI site respectively: 5' GC GGA TCC AIY GTG SWG TWY NTK GGM GG 3' (SEQ ID NO: 16) [corresponding to SVQYLGG (SEQ ID NO: 17) in the AcMNPV EGT sequence] and 5' GC GAA TTC GGM ABV MHC ACC AKN
  • Hindlll-C fragment as templates generated a PCR product of the size expected for the egt gene.
  • the sequence of the PCR product confirmed that it was derived from the HzSNPV egt gene.
  • the entire gene was then sequenced in both directions with the aid of synthetic oligonucleotide primers which provided sufficient overlap between contiguous sequences for confident alignments and unambiguous sequence information.
  • Fig. 11A Nucleotide sequences of known egts available in GenBank were aligned using the Pileup and Boxshade programs. (See Fig. 11B-11C) Amino acid sequences were compared using the Bestfit analysis (Genetics Computer Group, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI) . Phylogenetic relationships based on the sequence comparison are shown diagrammatically in Fig. 11A.
  • the egt gene was found to be located entirely within the EcoRI Q fragment. This fragment was cloned from HzSNPV into the EcoRI site of Bluescript II KS+ (Stratagene) and a 600 bp Sall/EcoRI fragment downstream of egt was removed to produce pHzEGT (Fig. 7) . pHzEGT was digested with Sail which removed an internal segment of egt and the ends filled in by Klenow. The vector fragment was then ligated to a blunt-ended fragment containing the E. coli -glucuronidase gene (GUS) , under the control of the D .
  • GUS E. coli -glucuronidase gene
  • melanogaster hsp70 promoter and Bsu36I and Sse8387I sites on either side of GUS to form pEGThspGUS . Additionally it was ligated to a DA26 promoted-, p6.9 promoted-, or a D . melanogaster HSP70 promoted- tox34 gene.
  • a plasmid with a deletion in egt was made from SalI-digested pHzEGT by ligation of the vector fragment.
  • the resulting plasmid, pEGTdel was used to generate a plasmid, pEGTlinker, with unique Bsu36I and Sse8387I sites within egt by digesting the plasmid DNA with Sail and ligating it to an oligonucleotide with Sail cohesive ends and unique Bsu361 and Sse8387I sites (Fig. 7) .
  • the oligonucleotide was constructed by annealing the following primers together (5' T CGA CCT CAG GGC AGC TTA AGG CCT GCA GG 3' (SEQ ID NO : 20) and 5' TCG ACC TGC AGG CCT TAA GCT GCC CTG AGG 3') (SEQ ID NO: 21).
  • HzSNPV was found to have a unique Bsu36I site which was located within the Hindlll-C fragment.
  • a 2.1 kb Clal fragment containing the Bsu36I site was cloned from Hindlll-C and the region surrounding the site was sequenced. The site was eliminated from the virus by digesting viral DNA with Bsu36I, filling in with Klenow polymerase and religating the DNA. The DNA was then digested with Bsu36I again and transfected into HzUNDK cells. Viruses emerging from these transfections were plaque-purified, amplified and tested for the loss of the Bsu36I site. Selected viruses lacking the Bsu36I site were then tested for their infectivity (LC 50 ) and virulence (LT 50 ) in H. zea neonates .
  • LC 50 infectivity
  • LT 50 virulence
  • the Bsu36I” virus, HzSNPV (Bsu361 " )
  • pEGThspGUS allelically recombined with pEGThspGUS to create an EGT deleted virus that yielded blue plaques in HzUNDK cells in the presence of X-gluc (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl ⁇ -D-glucuronide) .
  • X-gluc (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl ⁇ -D-glucuronide)
  • HzSNPV Baculovirus Expression Vectors : A Laboratory Manual , W. H. Freeman, New York, NY] using transfer plasmids HzEGTdel, HzEGTDA26 ox , HzEGTp ⁇ .9 ox34, and HzEGTHSPtox34 (Fig. 7).
  • allelic replacement [O'Reilly et al . (1992) Baculovirus Expression Vectors : A Laboratory Manual , W. H. Freeman, New York, NY] using transfer plasmids HzEGTdel, HzEGTDA26 ox , HzEGTp ⁇ .9 ox34, and HzEGTHSPtox34 (Fig. 7).
  • transfer plasmids HzEGTdel, HzEGTDA26 ox , HzEGTp ⁇ .9 ox34, and HzEGTHSPtox34 (Fig. 7).
  • viral DNA was linearized with Bsu36I before transfection of viral and
  • Virus recombinants were screened for a white, occlusion positive, plaque phenotype. Viruses were further plaque purified and then amplified. Viral DNA was analyzed by restriction endonuclease analysis to confirm allelic replacement.
  • LC 50 and ET 50 mean time to effectively paralyze 50% of test larvae of viruses were determined using neonate H. zea .
  • Bioassays were conducted as droplet feeding assays according to the protocols developed by Hughes et al . (1986) J. Invertebr. Pa thol . 4_8: 189-192.
  • Neonates were fed known concentrations of viral occlusion bodies (PIBs) suspended in 5% sucrose and 1 mg/ml FD&C blue #1 dye (Hilton Davis, Cincinnati, OH) by placing them in the center of a 60 mm plastic petri dish and providing them with 0.5 ⁇ l droplets of the PIB suspension pipetted on the bottom near the edge of the dish.
  • PIBs viral occlusion bodies
  • All recombinant viruses were constructed by allelic replacement using previously described methods [O'Reilly et al . (1992) supra] . Transfer plasmids were cotransfected into SF-21 cells with vSynVI ' gal [Wang et al . (1991) supra] and recombinant viruses were selected based on a white occlusion-positive plaque phenotype. Each recombinant virus was verified using appropriate restriction endonuclease digestion analysis. All recombinant viruses contain tox34 inserted upstream of and in the opposite direction to the polyhedrin gene.
  • PCR polymerase chain reaction
  • the primer tox34up was designed to add an extra glycine residue to the N-terminus of the mature tox34 gene product (see Fig. IA and IB) : N-terminal glycine residues reportedly stabilize recombinant gene products [Bachmair et al . (1986) Science 3_4: 179-186] .
  • the PCR- amplified product was digested with Hindlll and Smal (recognition sites incorporated into the primers) and inserted in frame into plasmid pBSig [O'Reilly et al . (1995) supra] between the EcoRI site, blunt-ended with
  • pBSigtox34 contains tox34 fused with the sarcotoxin IA signal sequence. The junction between the signal sequence and tox34 was confirmed by sequence analysis (Fig. 2B) . In addition, the entire tox34 PCR product was sequenced to ensure that no mutations were introduced during PCR.
  • the transfer vector, pSp-BSigtox34 was constructed by digesting pBSigtox34 with BamHI, filling in the ends with the large fragment of DNA polymerase I (Klenow) followed by digestion with Bglll. A fragment containing BSigtox34 was gel-purified and inserted into pSp-tox34 between a blunt-ended EcoRI site and the
  • Recombinant virus vSp-DCtox34 (Fig. 2A) , containing tox34 fused with the Drosophila cuticle gene signal sequence (Fig. 1C) [Snyder et al . (1982) Cell 2_9: 1027-1040] was constructed by digesting the plasmid pBSIGtox34SmaI with BamHI and Smal and inserting a 24 base pair oligonucleotide containing Esp3I and BspMI sites.
  • the plasmid pBSigtox34SmaI is a derivative of pBSigtox34 containing a Smal site at the junction between the sarcotoxin IA signal sequence and tox34 .
  • the resulting plasmid, pEBtox34 contains two unique restriction sites (Esp3I and BspMI) upstream of the mature tox34 sequence in place of the sarcotoxin IA signal sequence.
  • the oligonucleotide was designed so that digestion with Esp3I and BspMI and subsequent filling in of the ends with Klenow polymerase generates blunt ends into which any signal sequence can be inserted in-frame with tox34 in an optimal baculovirus late/very late AUG context [O'Reilly et al . (1992) supra].
  • pEBDCtox34 contains tox34 fused in-frame with the Drosophila cuticle signal sequence (Fig. 1C) .
  • the correct junction between the cuticle signal sequence and tox34 was verified by sequence analysis.
  • DCtox34 was transferred into pSp-tox34 by digesting pEBDCtox34 with BamHI, filling in the ends with Klenow and digesting with Bglll. The fragment containing DCtox34 was then cloned into pSp-tox34 digested with EcoRI, blunt ended, and digested with Bglll, thus placing DCtox34 under control of the P synX i V promoter (Fig. 2A, vSp-DCtox34) .
  • Recombinant virus vSp-tox21A/tox34 (Fig. 2A) containing a hybrid toxin gene composed of the mature tox34 gene fused with the tox21A signal sequence [Tomalski et al . (1993) supra] was constructed using the technique of gene splicing by overlap extension [Horton et al .
  • the tox21A signal sequence was amplified with primers "a” (SEQ ID N ⁇ :5) and "b” (SEQ ID N ⁇ :6) (Fig. ID) using pBS-tox21A [Tomalski et al . (1993) supra] as a template. These primers correspond to the first 24 nucleotides of the tox21A signal sequence and are complementary to nucleotides 94 to 120 of tox34, respectively.
  • the mature tox34 gene was PCR amplified using two primers, one complementary to primer "b” (Fig. IA, primer “c”, SEQ ID N ⁇ :7), and the second one complementary to nucleotides 862 to 876 [Tomalski and Miller (1991) supra] at the 3' end of tox34 that was previously used to amplify tox34 in vSp-BSigtox34 (tox34down, see above) .
  • the PCR products from these two independent amplifications were combined and further amplified using primer "a” and tox34down, which resulted in a single fragment containing tox34 with the tox21A signal sequence (tox21A/tox34) .
  • Tox21A/tox34 was digested with EcoRI and Bglll (recognition sites incorporated into primers "a" and tox34up) and cloned into the corresponding sites in pSp-tox34 (see Fig. 2A) .
  • Example 7 Construction of recombinant AcMNPV viruses with tox34 under control of different cellular and viral promoters vp6.9tox34 and vDA26tox34 (Fig. 2B) were generated using allelic replacement as described previously [O'Reilly et al . (1992) supra] using the transfer plasmids described below.
  • p6.9tox34 was constructed by cloning a 933 bp EcoRI fragment containing tox34 from pSp-tox34 into p6.9hc between a Bglll site and a Kpnl site blunt-ended with T4 DNA polymerase.
  • p6.9hc is a reporter plasmid containing the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene (cat) under control of the late 6.
  • the transfer vector, pSp-p6.9tox34 was constructed by cloning a 1.1 kb EcoRI/EcoRV fragment from p6.9tox34 containing tox34 under 6.
  • 9K promoter [Wilson et al . (1987) J. Virol . £1:661-666] control into pSp-tox34 digested with EcoRI and EcoRV (see Fig. 2B) .
  • vDA26tox34 was constructed using two oligonucleotide primers corresponding to nucleotides -283 to -264 and complementary to -22 to -
  • pDA26CAT contains the DA26 gene promoter in place of capsid protein gene promoter.
  • a 933 bp fragment containing tox34 was removed from pSp- tox34 by digestion with EcoRI, blunt-ended with Klenow, and cloned into pDA26CAT digested with Bglll and Kpnl and treated with T4 DNA polymerase.
  • This construct was digested with EcoRI and EcoRV, and a 1.2 kb fragment containing tox34 under DA26 promoter control was inserted into the corresponding sites of pSp-p6.9tox34 resulting in the transfer vector pSp-DA26tox34 (see Fig. 2B)
  • Example 8 Construction of recombinant viruses without a reverse TAAG sequence in the native tox34 signal sequence Viruses vp6.9tox34m and vSp-tox34m (Fig. 2C) , with a mutated reverse TAAG sequence in the native tox34 signal sequence (Fig. IE), were generated by site-directed mutagenesis of transfer plasmids pSp- p6.9tox34 and pSp-tox34 using the Transformer Kit (Clontech, Palo Alto, California) according to the manufacturer's protocol.
  • a selection primer 5' -GGG TCG ACA CAG CTG CAG CTC-3' (SEQ ID NO: 8) which eliminates a Bglll site in both parent plasmids
  • a mutagenic primer 5' -GCC ATT ATC AAT CAA GGA AAT AT-3' (base change is underlined; SEQ ID NO: 9), complementary to nucleotides 104 to 126 of tox34 [Tomalski and Miller (1991) supra] , which eliminates the reverse TAAG sequence were used with the kit.
  • Transfer plasmids, pSp-p6.9tox34m and pSp-tox34m were sequenced to verify that the base change was present in the tox34 signal sequence.
  • Example 9 Time course of tox34 expression in insect cells
  • SF-21 or TN-368 cells (1.0 x 10 6 cells per 35 mm plate) were infected with virus at a multiplicity of infection of 10 plaque forming units (pfu) per cell.
  • pfu plaque forming units
  • the tissue culture media were collected, and the cells were lysed in 2X electrophoresis sample buffer [O'Reilly et al . (1992) supra] .
  • Proteins from cell lysates and extracellular fluids were analyzed by SDS-PAGE on 10% polyacrylamide gels, transblotted onto Millipore Immobilon polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membranes (Millipore, Bedford, Massachusetts) , and probed with a polyclonal antibody specific for Tox34 [McNitt et al. (1995) supra; Tomalski et al . (1989) supra]. Tox34 was visualized using the ECL Western blotting detection kit
  • RNA isolation and SI nuclease analysis Total RNA was isolated from vSp-BSigtox34 and vSp-tox34 infected
  • SF-21 cells at various times p.i. by the guanidinium isothiocyanate method [Chirgwin et al . (1979) Biochemistry 24:5294-52991.
  • SI nuclease analysis of tox34 transcripts in vSp-BSigtox34 or vSp-tox34 infected cells was performed using 25 ⁇ g of total RNA and either a 648 bp or a 668 bp Ndel-Hindlll fragment uniquely end-labeled at the Ndel site.
  • DNA-RNA hybridization was performed with 80% formamide-40 mM piperazine-N,N' -bis (2-ethanesulfonic acid) (PIPES) -0.4 M NaCl-1 mM EDTA at 30°C overnight.
  • SI nuclease reactions were carried out as described in Sambrook et al . (1989) supra.
  • PIBs Polyhedral inclusion bodies
  • the LC 50 (concentration of occluded viruses required to kill 50% of the test larvae) and the ET S0 (mean time to effectively paralyze or kill 50% of the test larvae) of toxin-expressing viruses and wild-type AcMNPV were determined using neonate Trichoplusia ni or S. frugiperda as previously described [Tomalski and Miller (1992) supra] .
  • Six virus concentrations with 60 insects per dose were used to test each virus.
  • LC 50 and ET 50 data were analyzed by Probit analysis [Daum, R.J.
  • ViStat 2.1 analysis Statistical package for the analysis of baculovirus bioas ⁇ ay data, Boyce Thompson Institute, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY] , respectively. All bioassays were performed at least twice and the results presented represent an average of the results.
  • Example 12 Recombinant AcMNPV Virus Construction pEV-Tox34 was constructed by inserting the EcoRI fragment containing the Tox34 coding sequence into EcoRI-cut pEVmodXIV, which supplied the powerful LSXIV promoter and sequences flanking the polyhedrin gene of AcMNPV. DNA of wild-type AcMNPV and pEV-Tox34 were cotransfected into insect cells as described in Miller et al . (1986) supra, and a recombinant virus was isolated and designated vEV-Tox34 after selection on the basis of its occlusion-negative phenotype and screening for the proper allelic replacement events by restriction endonuclease analysis and Southern hybridization.
  • Tox34 gene in vEV-Tox34-infected insect cells was tested as follows. Sf21 cells were separately infected with AcMNPV and vEV-Tox34 as described in Lee et al . (1978) supra; Miller et al . (1986) supra, and the cell culture fluids from control (uninfected) , AcMNPV and vEV-Tox34-infected cells were collected after 48 hrs of infection. Larvae of the wax moth Galleria mellonella were each injected with 5 microliter aliquots of culture fluids.
  • Insect larvae injected with the culture fluid from vEV-Tox34-infected cells were paralyzed within 2 minutes whereas the insect larvae injected with fluid from wild-type AcMNPV-infected cells showed no paralytic response over an extended time period (several days) .
  • Paralyzed larvae were visually immobile, they lacked the righting response (the ability to turn themselves upright after turned onto their dorsal sides) and they failed to spin silk to line their burrows (a stereotypic behavior of wax moth larvae) .
  • Control larvae exhibited movement, the righting response and silk-spinning behavior.
  • insects were infected with vEV-Tox34 by injecting purified budded virus into the hemolymph of test larvae.
  • T. ni larvae in about early fourth instar were injected with TC-100 medium (mock-infected) or medium containing budded virus particles from cell cultures infected with either wild- type AcMNPV or vEV-Tox34 (4 x 10 5 plaque-forming units of virus per larva) .
  • Control larvae included those larvae injected with culture medium or with wild-type AcMNPV.
  • Insects injected with VEV-Tox34 were paralyzed (immobilized and lacked righting response) by 36 hr after injection.
  • the Tox34 coding sequence is expressed under the regulatory control of the very late
  • LSXIV baculovirus promoter [see also U.S. Patent No. 5,244,805 (Miller) issued September 19, 1993] which is not expressed until about 18 hrs pi in cells infected at a high multiplicity of infection (moi; i.e. 10 viruses/cell) or until 24-30 hrs pi in cells infected at a moi of 1.
  • moi multiplicity of infection
  • Tox34 expression it was not unexpected that the paralytic effects of baculovirus- mediated Tox34 expression were not observed until about 36 hrs pi.
  • Transplacement plasmid phc-ETL-Tox34 was constructed with the Tox34 coding sequence expressed under the regulatory control of the ⁇ TL promoter of AcMNPV [described in Crawford et al . (1988) J. Virol . £2:2773-2778, incorporated by reference herein] .
  • the Tox34-containing EcoRI fragment was inserted into the EcoRI site of phc-dET, which was derived from phcwt [Rankin et al . (1988) supra] by replacing the polyhedrin promoter between the EcoRV site and the Bglll site with the
  • ETL promoter sequences extending from -6 (relative to the ETL translational initiation ATG at +l,+2,+3) to approximately 300 bp upstream of the ETL coding sequences .
  • the transplacement plasmid and wild-type AcMNPV were cotransfected and appropriate nonoccluded recombinants were isolated and characterized.
  • Time response 2 virus ET 50 ⁇ s.e. (h) slope wt AcMNPV 94.6 ⁇ 1.6 14.8 vSp-tox34 51.1 ⁇ 0.9 13.2 vSp-tox21A 62.1 + 0.9 18.8 vSp-BSigtox34 70.0 + 2.6 6.4 vSp-tox21A/tox34 60.8 ⁇ 2.0 8.1 vSp-DCtox34 49.9 + 1.0 12.5
  • Table 5 Response of neonate S. frugiperda larvae to oral infection by wt AcMNPV or recombinant virus expressing tox34 with or without a reverse TAAG sequence in the tox34 signal sequence.
  • Table 6 Response of neonate T. ni larvae to oral infection by wt AcMNPV or recombinant virus expressing tox34 with or without a reverse TAAG sequence in the tox34 signal sequence.
  • Virus LC50 95% Fiducial Limit Hetero- (PIB/ml) lower upper Slope geneity
  • HzEGTp6.9tox34 1. .6 x 10 3 1. .1 x 10 3 2, .5 X 10 3 1, .7 ⁇ 0, .3 0.6
  • HzEGThsptox34 2. .3 x 10 3 1. .2 x 10 3 5, .0 X 10 3 1, .9 ⁇ 0, .3 1.2
  • MOLECULE TYPE cDNA to mRNA
  • HYPOTHETICAL NO
  • MOLECULE TYPE cDNA to mRNA
  • HYPOTHETICAL NO
  • TGT CCA CTT TAT GAA AAT ACT TGG ATT AAT TAT GGA AAA TGT AAT GAA 598 Cys Pro Leu Tyr Glu Asn Thr Trp He Asn Tyr Gly Lys Cys Asn Glu 145 150 155 160
  • MOLECULE TYPE DNA (genomic)
  • HYPOTHETICAL NO (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:22:
  • MOLECULE TYPE DNA (genomic)
  • HYPOTHETICAL NO
  • ATC AGT CTA GTA CAC ATG TTG ATT GAT CAA TTC TCT GTG GAG AGT GTA 688
  • CAA ACT AAA ATG CTT CGC CAT CAA TTC GGA CCA AAC ACG CCC AGC GTG 1024

Abstract

Provided herein are genetically engineered baculoviruses which express insect-specific toxins, preferably paralytic neurotoxins, under the regulatory control of strong promoters expressed early after infection and in a wide variety of insect cells. Particularly preferred insect-specific paralytic neurotoxins are those of insect-predacious mites, including Pyemotes. The genetically engineered baculoviruses of the present invention are improved over prior art viruses in that they produce efficacious insect-toxic levels of the neurotoxin at earlier times after infection, particularly in comparison to baculoviruses in which the toxin is expressed under the control of a polyhedrin or granulin promoter. Insect-toxic compositions are also provided and methods of insect control using these compositions are described.

Description

BIOLOGICAL INSECT CONTROL AGENTS EXPRESSING INSECT-SPECIFIC MITE TOXIN GENES, METHODS AND COMPOSITIONS
TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to methods and compositions for improved biological control of insect pests. More particularly, the present invention relates to the efficient expression of insect- specific toxins coding sequences in baculoviruses for use as biological insect control agents .
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Interest in the biological control of insect pests has arisen as a result of disadvantages of conventional chemical pesticides. Chemical pesticides generally affect beneficial as well as nonbeneficial species, and insect pests tend to acquire resistance to such chemicals. Furthermore, chemical residues pose environmental hazards and possible health concerns. Biological control presents an alternative means of pest control which can reduce dependence on chemical pesticides.
Baculoviruses are a large group of evolutionarily related viruses which infect only arthropods [Miller, L.K. (1981) in Genetic Engineering in the Plant Sciences, N. Panopoulous, (ed.), Praeger Publ., New York, pp. 203-224; Carstens, (1980) Trends in Biochemical Science 5_2_: 107-110; Harrap and Payne (1979) in Advances in Virus Research, Vol. 25, Lawfer et al . (eds.), Academic Press, New York, pp.
273-355, Granados, R. R. and Federici, B. A. eds. (1986) The Biology of Baculoviruses, Vol. 1, Biological Properties and Molecular Biology, CRC Press Inc., Boca Raton, FL) . Some baculoviruses only infect insects which are pests of commercially important agricultural and forestry crops. Other baculoviruses are known which specifically infect other insect pests, e.g., mosquitoes and fleas. Such baculoviruses are potentially valuable as biological control agents . A potential advantage of baculoviruses as biological pesticides is their host specificity. Because individual baculovirus strains usually only infect one or a few species of insects, they pose little or no risk to man or the environment, and can be used without adversely affecting beneficial insect species.
Baculovirus subgroups include nuclear polyhedrosis viruses, now called nucleopolyhedroviruses (NPVs) and granulosis viruses, now called granuloviruses (GV) . In the occluded forms of baculoviruses , the virions (enveloped nucleocapsids) are embedded in a crystalline protein matrix. This structure, referred to as an occlusion body, is the form found extraorganismally in nature, and it is generally responsible for spreading the infection between insects. The characteristic feature of the NPVs is that many virions are embedded in each occlusion body, which is relatively large (up to 5 micrometers) . Occlusion bodies of SNPVs (single nucleopolyhedrosis viruses) are smaller and contain a single virion with multiple nucleocapsids each. Multiple nucleopolyedrosis viruses (MNPVs) have multiple nucleocapsids per virion and multiple virions per occlusion body. Granulosis viruses (GVs) have a single viron with one nucleocapsid per occulusion body. The crystalline protein matrix of the occlusion bodies of these forms is primarily composed of a single 25 to 33 kDa polypeptide which is known as polyhedrin or granulin. Grόner et al . in The Biology of Baculoviruses, Vol. 1, supra, which is incorporated by reference herein, in Chap. 9, Tables 2 and 7 provides an extensive list of NPV hosts and GV hosts.
In nature, infection is initiated when an insect ingests food contaminated with baculovirus particles, typically in the form of occlusion bodies. The occlusion bodies dissociate under the alkaline conditions of the insect midgut, releasing the virions which then invade epithelial cells lining the gut. Pre-occlusion bodies are also infective (WO 97/08297, published 3/6/97) . Within a host cell, the baculovirus migrates to the nucleus where replication takes place. Initially, specific viral proteins are produced within the infected cell via the transcription and translation of so-called "early genes."
Among other functions, these proteins are required for the replication of the viral DNA, which begins 4 to 6 hours after the virus enters the cell. Viral DNA replication proceeds up to about 24 hours post- infection (pi) . From about 8 to 24 hours pi, infected cells express "late genes" at high levels. These include components of the nucleocapsid which surround the viral DNA during the formation of progeny virus particles . Production of progeny virus particles begins around 12 hours pi. Initially, progeny virus migrate to the cell membrane where they acquire an envelope as they bud out from the surface of the cell. The nonoccluded virus particles can then infect other cells within the insect. Polyhedrin synthesis begins approximately 18 hours after infection and increases to very high levels by 24 to 48 hours pi. At about 24 hrs pi, there is a decrease in the rate of nonoccluded virus production, and most progeny virus particles are then embedded in occlusion bodies. Occlusion body formation continues until the cell dies or lyses . Some baculoviruses infect virtually every tissue in the host insect so that at the end of the infection process, the entire insect is liquified, releasing extremely large numbers of occlusion bodies which can then spread the infection to other insects. [Reviewed in The Biology of Baculoviruses,
Vol. I and II, Granados and Federici (eds.), CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 1986] .
Baculoviruses which are derivatives of AcMNPV and are useful as expression vectors have been described in U.S. Patent No. 5,244,805
(Miller, issued September 14, 1993); Rankin et al . (1988) Gene 70:39- 49; Ooi et al. (1989) J. Mol . Biol . 210 :721-736 , Thiem and Miller (1990) Gene .91:87-95. Particularly strong late and very late promoters include the modified polyhedrin promoter LSXIV, the hybrid Cap/Polh promoter and the synthetic promoter Syn. However, there is a need for baculoviruses which cause insects to cease feeding earlier than prior art baculoviruses so that crop damage is minimized.
Baculoviruses with improved insecticidal properties have been described. For example, AcMNPV in which the egrt (ecdysone glucosyl transferase) gene has been inactivated causes earlier cessation of feeding and earlier larvae death as compared to larvae infected with wild-type AcMNPV [See, e.g., U.S. Patent No. 5,352,451 (Miller et al . , issued October 4, 1994] .
Pyemotes tri tici , the straw-itch mite, is one of thirteen known species of mites in the genus Pyemotes, all of which are predatory and which possess venoms causing mild to extreme toxicity in target insects . The thirteen known species can be divided into two morphological groups which also differ in host preference, methods of dispersal and toxicity to their target prey, and in the effects of their toxins on insects and man. The scolyti and ventricosus groups are summarized in Table 1. Most members of the ventricosus group have extremely insect-toxic venoms. The mite venoms do not appear to be specific for particular insects, since the venoms are toxic to a wide variety of insect host and nonhost species. However, the P. tri tici toxins do not appear to be toxic to mammals.
Insect-specific toxins in the venom of P. tri tici , have been purified and characterized [Tomalski et al . (1988) Toxicon 26 : 127-132 ;
Tomalski et al . (1989) Toxicon 2_7 : 1151-1167] . These toxins are produced in female mites and injected into insect prey as components of the venom, resulting in paralysis of the prey, which allows the feeding female mite to become fully gravid, thus ensuring adequate nutrients for reproduction. The toxin designated TxP-I has been purified to apparent homogeneity; it has an apparent molecular weight of 27,000, as determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Two other components were resolved which exhibit molecular weights of 28,000 and 29,000; these two components comprise TxP-II. Based on peptide mapping and immunoblot experiments, it was concluded that the protein components of TxP-I and TxP-II are isoproteins [Tomalski et al . (1989) supra] . DNA sequences encoding P. tri tici toxin proteins have been isolated and characterized, and expressed in AcMNPV. See, e.g., U.S. Patent No. 5,266,317, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Insect-specific neurotoxins have also been found in the venoms of other arthropods including, but not limited to, scorpions, wasps and spiders [Zlotkin (1985) in Comprehensive Insect Physiology, Biochemistry and Pharmacology, I. Kerkut and L.I. Gilbert (eds.)
Pergamon Press, Oxford, U.K., pp. 499-546]. Several insect-specific toxins (and corresponding coding sequences) from scorpions and other insect predators have also been described [See, e.g., EP 505 207 (published September 23, 1992, Cayley et al . ) ; Maeda et al . (1991) Virology 184:777-780; McCutchen et al . (1991) Bio/Technology 9_ - 848-852 ;
Stewart et al . (1991) Nature 352 :85-88] . Merryweather et al . (1990) J. Gen . Virology 71:1535-1544 reported the construction of baculovirus containing the Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki HD-73 delta endotoxin expressed the control of the polyhedrin promoter.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
Figure 1A-1E presents nucleotide and amino acid sequences of signal sequences tested with the itch mite toxin coding sequences . The signal sequences shown correspond to tox34 (Fig. 1A; nucleotides 12-56 of SEQ ID Nθ:l), sarcotoxin IA gene of S. peregrina (Fig. IB; SEQ ID Nθ:10), the cuticle gene of D. melanogaster (Fig. 1C; SEQ ID Nθ:12), tox21A from P. tri tici (Fig. ID; nucleotides 119-208 of SEQ ID Nθ:3) and a modified tox34 signal sequence (Fig IE; SEQ ID Nθ:14) . The amino acid sequence of each signal peptide is highlighted by a shaded box below its corresponding nucleotide sequence. The mature N-terminus of tox34 is indicated by the amino acid residues in an open box. In the case of the sarcotoxin IA gene signal (Fig. IB) a glycine residue was introduced onto the mature end of Tox34. Half arrows indicate the location and direction of PCR primers used to generate tox34 with the tox21A signal sequence (Fig. ID) . A shaded box in the nucleotide sequence of A shows the location of a complementary TAAG sequence which was mutated at the base pair marked by an asterisk in Fig. IE.
Figure 2A-2C presents schematic diagrams showing the polyhedrin gene region of baculovirus recombinants expressing tox34 with alternate signal sequences (Fig. 2A) ; under control of different promoters (Fig. 2B) ; and with a modified native tox34 signal sequence (Fig 2C) . The name of each virus is shown on the left. All recombinant viruses contain the toxin gene inserted into the AcMNPV genome upstream of and in the opposite orientation to the polyhedrin gene (polh) and its promoter (PP) . The signal sequence (labeled above) and promoter used to drive toxin expression (labeled below with arrow) are shown for each recombinant .
Figure 3 illustrates the effect of different insect signal sequences on expression and secretion of Tox34 in SF-21 cells. Cell lysates (lanes 1 to 6) or supernatants (lanes 7 to 12) from SF-21 cells infected with the indicated viruses were harvested at 48 h post infection (p.i.) and the proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and visualized by immunoblotting.
Figures 4A-4B illustrate the effects of different promoters on Tox34 expression and secretion in TN-368 cells. Cell lysates (Fig. 4A) or supernatants (Fig. 4B) from TN-368 cells infected with the indicated viruses were harvested at the indicated times post infection. Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, blotted onto a membrane and probed with antibody directed against Tox34. Tox34 and its precursor (pTox34) form are indicated on the right .
Figure 5 provides a comparison of the secreted levels of Tox34 from vDA26tox34- or vHSP70tox34-infected SF-21 or TN-368 cells. SF-21 (lanes 1 to 10) or TN-368 (lanes 11 to 20) cells were infected with vDA26tox34 or vHSP70tox34, and supernatants were collected at the indicated times p.i. Proteins in the supernatant fractions were concentrated, separated by SDS-PAGE and blotted onto a membrane. Tox34 was detected using an antibody specific for purified Tox34.
Figs. 6A-6B illustrates the effects of the complementary TAAG sequence in the native tox34 signal sequence on expression and secretion of the Tox34 protein. Proteins in cell lysates (Fig. 6A) or supernatants (Fig. 6B) from TN-368 cells infected with the indicated viruses at 18, 24 and 48 h p.i. were separated by SDS-PAGE, transferred onto membranes, and probed with anti-Tox34 antibody.
Figure 7 is a diagram showing the plasmid transfer vectors used to construct recombinant HzSNPV viruses . Plasmid pHzEGT contains a complete egt gene while all others contain deletions and/or insertions in the e/t gene. Viral sequences were inserted at the EcoRI site of pBluescript KS on the left while the junction at the right is a fusion of a viral Sail site and the vector Xhol site. Restriction sites indicated with the viral DNA inserts are Sail (S) , Bsu36I (Bsu) and Sse8387I ( Sse) . Promoters (hsp70, DA26 or p6.9) are shown by shaded or dark boxes while the foreign gene insert (GUS or tox34 ) are indicated by open boxes .
Figure 8 shows the results for an assay of EGT activity in the culture supernatants removed from infected Hz cells. Cells were either mock infected or infected with HzSNPV or AcNPV. UDP-glucose (Glc) or UDP-galactose (Gal) were used as substrates. The products of the reactions were separated from the substrates by thin layer chromatography. The position of the [3H] ecdysone substrate is indicated (E) on the right as are the positions of the ecdysone-glucose (E-Glc) or ecdysone-galactose (E-Gal) products.
Figure 9A is a diagram of the Hindlll restriction map of HzSNPV indicating the position of the IE-1 and polh genes [Cowan et al . (1994) J. Gen . Virol . T5= 3211-3218] . Figure 9B provides the nucleotide sequence of the 5' end of a 2.1 kB Clal fragment of Hln lll-C which contains the Bsu36I site (SEQ ID NO:22).
Figures 10A-10B provide the nucleotide sequence of HzSNPV egt gene and the deduced amino acid sequence. The predicted translation start and stop codons and a potential polyadenylation site are in bold type. The Sail sites within the EGT coding sequences are indicated by double underlining. See also SEQ ID NOS: 23 AND 24.
Figure 11A is a phylogenetic tree of baculovirus ecdysteroid glycosyl transferases for which sequence information is available. The single most parsimonious tree with length of 1538 and a consistency index of 0.81 was constructed using the Branch and Bound Search program of Paup 3.1 [Swofford, D.L. (1993) Phylogenetic analysis using parsimony. Version 3.1, computer program distributed by the Illinois Natural History Survey, Champaign, IL] . Numbers above the lines are the number of changes between the node and virus, while the underlined numbers below the lines indicate the frequency of that cluster after bootstrap analysis with 100 replicates. Figure 11B presents aligned amino acid sequences of baculovirus ecdysteroid UDP glucosyl transferases . The EGT sequences analyzed include those of AcMNPV [O'Reilly and Miller (1990) J. Virol . 64. : 1321-1328] ; Buzura suppressaria NPV, BsSNPV [Hu et al . (1997) Virus Res . 4_7: 91-97] ; Bombyx mori NPV, BmNPV [Genbank Accession No. L33180] ; Choristoneura fumiferana NPV, CfMNPV and its associated defective virus, CfDΞF [Barrett et al . (1995) J. Gen . Virol . ,76_:2447-2456] ; Lymantria dispar NPV, LdMNPV [Riegel et al . (1994) J. Gen . Virol . 75_: 829-838] ; Maxnestra brassicae NPV, MbMNPV [Clarke et al . (1996) J. Gen . Virol . 77:2865- 2871]; Orgyia pseudotsugata NPV, OpMNPV [Ahrens et al . (1997) Virology 229:381-399; Genbank Accession No. U75930] ; S . li ttoralis NPV, SlMNPV [Faktor et al . (1995) Virus Genes Ll:47-52] and Lacanobia oleracea GV, LoGV [Genbank Accession No. Y08294] .
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to provide baculoviruses which have been genetically engineered to contain and express insect- specific toxin genes under the control of promoters which allow the expression of the toxin coding sequence such that there is sufficient expression of the toxin sequence at a time earlier than enabled by prior art viruses, with the result that infected insects stop feeding and die sooner than with infection by prior art viruses. As specifically exemplified, the toxin genes expressed are those from insect-parasitic mites such as those of the genus Pyemotes, particularly those from ventricosus group of the Pyemotes. In a specific embodiment the insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin coding sequence is Tox34 derived from Pyemotes tri tici ; this coding sequence is provided in SEQ ID Nθ:l; a second specific embodiment of an insect paralytic neurotoxin coding sequence is termed Tox21a herein (SEQ ID Nθ:3; amino acid sequence, SEQ ID Nθ:4), also from Pyemotes tri tici . It will be understood in the art that other insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin coding sequences from mites can be isolated and identified by nucleotide sequence homology, as determined in hybridization experiments [See, e.g., Hames and Higgins (1985) Nucleic Acid Hybridization, IRL Press, Washington, DC] employing sequence information provided herein. Insect-specific paralytic toxin coding sequences from insect-predacious mites which have at least 70% nucleotide sequence homology to the coding sequence in SEQ ID Nθ:l and which encode toxins with substantially similar biology activity in insects are within the scope of the present invention. As disclosed herein, the recombinant HzSNPV in which the itch mite toxin coding sequence is expressed under the regulatory control of the AcMNPV 6.9K promoter or a heat shock promoter, preferably from an insect heat shock gene or gene family such as hsp70, hsp83 , hsp22 or hsp23 . A preferred heat shock promoter is the Drosophila melanogaster hsp70 promoter. The baculoviruses in which an insect-specific toxin gene is expressed under the control of a promoter such as the D. melanogaster hsplO promoter or the AcMNPV 6.9K promoter (or a DA26 promoter) are improved over prior art baculoviruses as insect control agents. These recombinant HzSNPV derivatives cause insect paralysis and death sooner than those constructs in which a mite toxin coding sequence is expressed under the control of very late promoters such as the polyhedrin promoter.
Genetically engineered baculoviruses for insect control other than the exemplified AcMNPV and HzSNPV can be produced using the teachings of the present Specification taken with what is well known to the art. Toxins other than those encoded by the tox34 and tox21a coding sequences can be inserted under the regulatory control of a heat shock promoter, preferably the hsp70 promoter or 6. 9K or a DA26 promoter promoter as disclosed herein to produce killing properties when compared with baculoviruses in which the toxin coding sequences are inserted under the regulatory control of late or very late promoters .
The invention also includes a recombinant DNA molecule comprising a coding sequence for an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin wherein said encoded insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin is expressed under the regulatory control of a heat shock promoter, preferably from an animal, more preferably from an insect, especially the Drosophila hsp70 promoter or the AcMNPV 6. 9K promoter. A DA26 promoter can also be used. In particular, the hsp70 promoter is highly expressed in insect cells from a wide variety of species. Thus, genetically engineered baculoviruses expressing an insect-specific toxin under the regulatory control of this promoter are surprisingly improved in the time at which paralysis occurs and in terms of the insect species in which such a genetically engineered baculovirus is effective as an insect control agent . Particularly preferred embodiments of such a genetically modified baculovirus are those AcMNPV and HzSNPV derivatives which are occluded; preoccluded viruses are also useful in insect toxic compositions and methods for control of insect pests using same. For any example of a nonoccluded nuclear polyhedrosis or granulosis virus derivative, the skilled artisan understands how to construct an analogous occluded virus without the expense of undue experimentation. Since there is significant homology among some genes of different baculoviruses, the skilled artisan will also understand how to insert the toxin gene, fused to an appropriate promoter, into the genomes of other baculoviruses in similar nonessential locations.
Accordingly, the invention includes a baculovirus which has been genetically modified to contain and express a gene encoding an insect- specific toxin, preferably a paralytic neurotoxin, under the regulatory control of a promoter which allows strong gene expression at a time relatively early after infection, especially as compared with other promoters such as that of the polyhedrin gene .
As specifically exemplified, the invention also provides a baculovirus which has been genetically modified to contain and express a coding sequence for an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin of a mite of the genus Pyemotes , specifically from a mite of the species Pyemotes tri tici . A specifically exemplified toxin coding sequence has a nucleotide sequence as given in SEQ ID Nθ:l from an aspartate encoded at about nucleotide 120 to a cysteine encoded at about nucleotide 873. An alternative coding sequence for an insect-specific neurotoxin of an insect-predacious mite is that as shown in SEQ ID NO: 3, from an aspartate encoded at about nucleotide 120 to a cysteine encoded at about nucleotide 873. Also within the scope of the present invention are mite toxin coding sequences having at least about 70% nucleotide sequence identity to the exemplified coding sequences as provided in
SEQ ID Nθ:l and SEQ ID NO : 3.
As exemplified, the baculovirus derivative is an NPV baculovirus, specifically, an AcMNPV derivative or an HzSNPV derivative.
Another object of the invention is an insect-toxic composition comprising an insect-toxic amount of a baculovirus, genetically engineered to express an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin at a level that results in a toxic effect on a targeted insect, and an agriculturally or otherwise environmentally acceptable carrier. Such compositions can be employed for protection of plants from insect pests. Preferred control agents are those which express an insect- specific paralytic neurotoxin gene from an insect-parasitic mite, and particularly those mites of the genus Pyemotes . It is preferred that the baculovirus particles are present in the occluded or preocculuded form. As specifically exemplified, the baculovirus derivative is an AcMNPV derivative or an HzSNPV derivative, and the recombinant baculovirus expresses an insect-specific toxin at an insect-toxic or insect-paralyzing level at a time sooner than that enabled by prior art viruses. It is a further object of the invention to provide a method for the biological control of an insect pest comprising the step of applying an insect-toxic composition which contains an insect-toxic amount of a baculovirus which has been genetically engineered to express an insect-selective toxin gene such as an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin gene from an insect-parasitic mite in an effective amount at a time earlier than enabled by prior art viruses. Such an insect-toxic composition is applied in the vicinity of a targeted insect, an insect habitat or to an area, plant or environment that is to be protected from the insect pest . The amount of said baculovirus derivative in said composition and the level of expression of said toxin coding sequence the baculovirus are such that said composition produces a toxic effect in a targeted insect, resulting in a reduction or, more preferably, a cessation of feeding. Preferred baculovirus derivatives include AcMNPV derivatives and HzSNPV derivatives . The occluded forms of genetically altered nuclear polyhedrosis viruses are most useful in the present invention. The skilled artisan understands that the genetically altered virus expressing the insect toxin may itself be capable of occlusion or that occlusion may be achieved by other means, e.g., by coinfection with an occlusion-positive virus.
Useful promoters for toxin coding sequence expression include the heat shock promoters, preferably those from the animal kingdom, more preferably from an insect, and desirably from the hsp70 , hsp83 , hsp22 and hsp23 gene families, e.g., a D. melanogaster hsp70 promoter. Particularly preferred for use in the control of insect-specific toxin gene expression are those heat shock promoters which are relatively strongly constitutively expressed. However, a number of heat shock promoter sequences are well known and available to the art . Preferably, the insect toxin coding sequence is expressed under the regulatory control of the Drosophila melanogaster hsp70 promoter or the
AcMNPV 6. 9K promoter . The invention includes a method for the control of insect pests comprising the step of applying an insect-toxic amount of the inseσticidal composition of the present invention to a habitat of said insect pests, for example, to plants.
Similarly, it is an object to provide baculoviruses which are genetically altered to express an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin coding sequence, which are effective against insect pests other than those which attack or are harmful to plants . Such an agent can be incorporated into insect-toxic, insect-paralytic, or insecticidal compositions along with environmentally acceptable carriers as understood in the art, and can be used in a method to control a target insect pest susceptible to the particular baculovirus employed. For example, there are baculoviruses known to specifically infect each of mosquitoes and fleas. See, Beard et al . (1989) J. Invertebra te Path . 54: 128-131 and Federici (1980) Virology 100:1-9. The target insect guides the ordinary skilled artisan in the selection of the particular baculovirus modified to express paralytic toxin.
Especially preferred in the recombinant baculoviruses, insecticidal compositions and methods of the present invention are those baculoviruses in which an insect-specific neurotoxin coding sequence is expressed and in which an ecdysteroid UDP-glycosyl transferase gene has been inactivated.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
A biological insect control agent is an agent effective in the control of insect pests. As used herein, insect control agents include baculoviruses which have been genetically modified to express an insect-specific toxin, preferably an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin, in a way that leads to a cessation of feeding, insect paralysis or insect death at a time sooner than prior art baculoviruses due to the use of promoters which promote higher levels of toxin gene expression and at a time earlier than with previously described baculoviruses .
Control can refer to limitation of feeding behavior or to killing of an insect pest. A biological insect control agent of the present invention has an insect-toxic effect that is attributable at least in part to the expression of an insect-specific toxin coding sequence. An insect-toxic effect relates to any adverse effect on a targeted insect and is observable as paralysis and/or killing of that insect or as a change in normal behavior of the targeted insect such as in feeding behavior, righting response or other stereotypic behaviors. This toxic effect occurs due to early and efficient expression of such a toxin coding sequence .
Insect-predacious mites are those mites which feed on insects. Many of such mites inject venom into the insect hosts on which they feed. Such venom contains insect-specific paralytic neurotoxins to immobilize the host insects. Mites expressing insect-specific paralytic toxin genes include those within the ventricosus group including P. anobii , P. beckeri , P. emerginatus, P . schwerdtfegeri , P. tu±>erculatus, P. tri tici , P . ventricosus and P. zwoelferi .
An insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin is a polypeptide which causes paralysis of a sensitive insect larva or adult, but has no significant toxic effect on other organisms. The paralytic effect may initially be observed as an effect on mobility or other behaviors of the insect, including feeding behavior. Insect-specific neurotoxins are those which adversely affect insects, and have negligible effects on higher animals, especially mammals. The insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin of this invention is specifically exemplified by Tox34 and Tox21a, and/or the TxP-I and TxP-II proteins produced by P. tri tici .
The deduced amino acid sequences for two representative insect-specific paralytic proteins are presented in SEQ ID NO: 2 and SEQ ID Nθ:4. A toxin that is functionally equivalent to the neurotoxins of this invention effects a similar muscle contractile paralysis in insects as is caused by Tox34 and Tox21a. It is well known in the biological arts that certain amino acid substitutions can be made in protein sequences without affecting the function of the protein. Generally, conservative amino acid substitutions or substitutions of similar amino acids are tolerated without affecting protein function. Similar amino acids can be those that are similar in size and/or charge properties, for example, aspartate and glutamate and isoleucine and valine are both pairs of similar amino acids. Similarity between amino acid pairs has been assessed in the art in a number of ways. For example, Dayhoff et al . (1978) in Atlas of Protein Sequence and Structure, Vol. 5, Suppl . 3, Chapter 22, pages 345-352, incorporated by reference herein, provides frequency tables for amino acid substitutions which can be employed as a measure of amino acid similarity. Dayhoff et al . ' s frequency tables are based on comparisons of amino acid sequences for proteins having the same function from a variety of evolutionarily different sources.
Additional functional equivalents of insect-specific paralytic neurotoxins as defined herein include polypeptides with portions of amino acid sequences with substantial identity to Tox34 or Tox21a or polypeptides which themselves are a portion of a full length TxP-I protein or which have the amino acid sequence of a Tox34 or Tox21a protein into which an insertion has been made, and which retain the biological activity, in these examples, contractile muscle paralysis.
Insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin genes may be found in insect-predacious mites, including but not limited to those listed in Table 1, particularly those within the ventricosus group, or in other insect parasites or predators. Genes homologous to the tox34 and tox21a genes of the present invention may be identified in mites or other sources by nucleic acid hybridization to sequences disclosed in the present invention or by cross-reaction of toxin molecules with antibody specific for the toxins of the present invention or by any other means known to the art, including the use of PCR technology carried out using oligonucleotides corresponding to conserved or unambiguous regions of the toxin gene(s) exemplified herein. In principle, any insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin gene may be identified and that gene expressed in a baculovirus vector. Biological activity of the expressed protein can be readily determined and similarly, the efficacy of such a genetically modified vector can be assessed using the teachings of the present invention in combination with techniques well known to the art.
Other known insect-specific toxins include those from scorpions and spiders [see, e.g., Bougis et al. (1988) in Proc . World Congress on Animal Natural Toxins, pp. 94-101; EP 417,906; and EP 507,207].
Functional equivalents of published coding sequences and recombinant baculoviruses can be generated by the skilled artisan using techniques and information well-known to the art, e.g., in a manner similar to that described hereinabove for the mite toxins .
A recombinant DNA molecule, as used herein, does not occur in nature, and it is one which has been produced either by natural processes using known methods and directed by man to produce a desired result or artificially produced from parts derived from heterologous sources, which parts may be naturally occurring or chemically synthesized molecules, and wherein those parts have been joined by ligation or other means known to the art.
Genetically modified to contain and express an insect-specific toxin gene, such as an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin gene, means that nucleotide sequences encoding such a protein and directing its synthesis are introduced into a baculovirus genome so that the modified baculoviruses can produce that neurotoxin protein. Any means known to the art may be used to insert the expressible neurotoxin gene into a particular baculovirus.
In the present invention, promoter and/or promoter-associated sequences direct gene expression, i.e., control transcription and translation of a nucleotide sequence encoding an insect-specific toxin in the infected target insect. Particularly preferred promoters are heat shock promoters such as those from the hsp70 , hsp83 , hsp22 and hsp23 gene families, especially the Drosophila melanogaster hsp70 promoter, and the AcMNPV (or other baculovirus) 6. 9K promoter. Alternatively a baculovirus DA26 promoter can be used.
It will be understood that the goals of a skilled artisan will determine the choice of particular regulatory sequences and/or promoters. For example, with baculovirus promoters, if high levels of expression are required, then an especially strong promoter, expressed at a very early time after infection and in a wide variety of insect cells, is appropriate. This is consistent with the goal of limiting the feeding of an insect larva to the shortest possible time (or to extend the effective host range of the insect virus) .
An NPV baculovirus isolated from Autographa californica
(Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) , specifically AcMNPV, is exemplified in the present disclosure. The terms AcMNPV and AcNPV are synonymous. The infectivity of most NPVs is reported to be restricted to members of the genus, family or order of the original host. AcMNPV baculoviruses replicate in several families of Lepidoptera, but their infectivity is reported to be limited to that order. A second specifically exemplified baculovirus modified to achieve improved efficacy as an insecticide, is HzSNPV, which was isolated from the cotton bollworm, Helicoverpa zea . HzSNPV infects and kills most species of Helicoverpa (Heliothis) . In the mid 1970s, HzSNPV was registered and commercially produced as a pesticide (Elcar™) by Sandoz Corp. to control infestations of the cotton bollworm [Ignoffo, CM. (1981) Living Microbial insecticides. In: Essays in Applied Microbiology (eds. J.R. Norris and M.H. Richmond) John Wiley & Sons, New York, pp. 2-31] . This product, however, did not compete successfully with the newly introduced pyrethroid pesticides. The poor field performance of Elcar™ was due, in part, to the slow rate that the virus killed the insect pest compared to contact chemical pesticides; the delay between virus application and insect death can result in significant crop damage [reviewed by Miller, L.K. (1995) J. Invertebr. Pathol . 65:211-216] .
The art understands how to insert an expressible gene into a viral genome at a site which does not interfere with viral replicative functions. Similarly, the skilled artisan can select a promoter with desired strength and temporal expression to drive the expression of an insect-specific toxin gene in a desired baculovirus vector. The target insect dictates the virus selected, and the particular virus to be engineered will guide the skilled artisan in the selection of an appropriate promoter .
A number of promoters have been used to control the expression heterologous coding sequences in recombinant baculovirus systems. The three classes of viral promoters for viruses such as AcMNPV are early, late and very late promoters [see, e.g., Morris and Miller (1992) J. Virol . 6j5: 7397-7405] . Early promoters include the ETL promoter of
AcMNPV, which has been described in U.S. Patent No. 5,266,317, the DA26 promoter and the IE0, IE1 and IEN promoters [O'Reilly et al . (1990) J. Gen . Virol . 21:1029-1037; Carson et al . (1991) J. Virol . 65:945-951; Kovacs et al . (1991) J. Virol . £j>: 5281-5288. Late AcMNPV promoters include 6.9K, the capsid ( vp39) promoter [Hill-Perkins and Possee (1990) J. Gen . Virol . 21=971-976; Thiem and Miller (1989) J. Virol . §3. -.2008-2018] . Very late promoters include the polyhedrin and a synthetic promoter [U.S. Patent No. 5,244,805, L. Miller, issued 1993] and the modified polyhedrin promoter LSXIV [Ooi et al . (1989) J. Molec . Biol . 210:721-736; U.S. Patent No. 5,244,805 (L. Miller, issued 1993].
Very late baculovirus promoters, as exemplified in AcMNPV, include the polyhedrin and plO promoters [Kelly and Lescott (1981) Microbiologica 4:35-57; Miller, L.K. (1988) Ann . Rev. Microbiol . 42.: 172-199; Bonning et al. (1994) J. Gen . Microbiol . 25:1551-1556]. See also Thiem and Miller (1990) Gene .9JL: 87-94 for further discussion of late and very late gene expression. See also The Baculoviruses, ed. , L.K. Miller, Plenum Press, New York, 1997.
A heat shock promoter with a significant level of constitutive expression of a downstream, operably linked coding sequence is exemplified by hsp70 promoters, in particular, the D . melanogaster hsp70 promoter [See, e.g., Toerek and Karch (1980) Nucl . Acids Res . 8.:3105-3123] . This promoter has been used for the expression of heterologous coding sequences in recombinant baculovirus vectors with varying degrees of success [Morris and Miller (1992) supra] .
For a general discussion of heat shock genes, their promoters and heterologous expression driven by them, see, e.g., Nover, L. (1987) Enzym . Microb . Technol . 9_: 130-144; Amin et al . (1988) Mol . Cell . Biol . 8.: 3761-3760, and references cited in said references, all of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entireties. It is a general property of hsp70, in Drosophila and in other organisms that there is a relatively high constitutive level of downstream gene expression. hsp70 promoter and promoter-associated sequences from a variety of insect, animal, plant and yeast sources are well known in the art.
In the context of the present application, a recombinant DNA molecule is produced via human intervention, and it contains nucleotide sequences which in nature are not covalently joined or associated. Chemical synthesis or in vi tro enzyme ligation can effect the joining, or recombination can be accomplished where the input sequences are introduced into a single cell in the laboratory and predicted resulting progeny are analyzed and purified.
As used herein, an insect control agent is a composition or the active ingredient of a composition which has an adverse affect on insect pests. Feeding by insects is reduced in response to the genetically engineered baculoviruses of the present invention as a result of the expressed toxin, and death of the insect follows. An insect control agent of this invention preferably is an insect virus genetically engineered to express a heterologous gene encoding an insect-specific toxin. Specific examples of such toxin proteins include, but are not limited to, Tox34 and Tox21a, with the amino acid sequences disclosed in SEQ ID NO : 2 and SEQ ID NO : 4 , respectively, as well as known scorpion and spider toxins .
To determine if HzSNPV possessed and expressed an egt gene, the presence of EGT activity in supernatants from uninfected and infected HzUNDK cells was determined by enzymatic assays using [H] ecdysone and UDP-glucose or UDP- galactose as substrates. Using UDP-glucose as a substrate, the supernatants from ACMNPV- and HzSNPV-infected cells converted ecdysone to a product of altered polarity which was previously identified as an ecdysone-glucose conjugate (Fig. 8) . This EGT activity was not observed in uninfected HzUNDK cells, indicating that HzSNPV induced an EGT activity during infection and possessed an egt gene. When UDP-galactose was used as a substrate, the EGT activity in AcMNPV-infected cell extracts was able to form an ecdysone-galactose conjugate, but HzSNPV-infected cells were unable to use UDP-galactose as a substrate (Fig. 8), indicating a difference in the substrate specificities of the AcMNPV and HzSNPV EGTs [O'Reilly et al . (1992)
Insect Biochem . Molec . Biol . 22.: 313-320] .
Restriction digests of the Elcar isolate of HzSNPV were identical to those isolates previously described bv Knell and Summers (1984) J. Gen . Virol . £5:445-450 and Cowan et al . (1994) J. Gen . Virol . 75:3211-
3218. A set of overlapping cosmids representing the entire HzSNPV genome was isolated and characterized. The basic physical map of the HzSNPV genome was confirmed and further refined (Fig. 9A) . The genes in the polyhedrin gene {polh) region, e.g. the IE1 gene, are known to be in reverse order to that of the conventional AcMNPV map [Cowan et al . (1994) supra] . Using the ACMNPV egt gene as a hybridization probe on Southern blots failed to give a strong hybridization signal under the conditions used. As an alternate approach to mapping the egt gene, cosmid plasmid clones corresponding to regions flanking the polh gene were screened by PCR using degenerate oligonucleotide primers which were constructed based on consensus sequences from conserved regions of the egt gene. PCR amplication using an HzSNPV cosmid which spanned Hindlll-J through -E fragments and a plasmid clone containing the ffindlll-C fragment as templates generated a PCR product of the size expected for the egt gene. One of the PCR products was cloned and sequenced and found to contain a portion of the egt gene . The sequences generated were used to prepare oligonucleotide primers which allowed the sequencing of the entire HzSNPV egt gene . The egrt gene was located entirely within the EσoRI Q fragment (Fig. 9A) and is transcribed from the same strand as the polh and IE1 genes. The DNA sequence of HzSNPV egt is presented in Fig. 10A-10B; see also SEQ ID NOs : 23 and 24. The percent sequence identity and similarity of HzSNPV EGT with other known EGTs are presented in Table 7, and Fig. 11 presents a phylogenetic tree based on amino acid sequence comparisons of several baculoviral egt genes .
The HzSNPV genome was found to have no Sse8387I sites and a single Bsu36I site which was located within the Hindlll-C fragment (Fig. 9A) . The sequence surrounding this restriction site was determined (Fig. 9B) . The region contained no open reading frames
(ORFS) of 50 codons or more and exhibited no homology with other known viral genes by computer analysis. This site was eliminated from the virus genome by restriction digestion, filling-in the 3 bp cohesive ends, and religation. The infectivity and virulence of the resulting virus lacking the Bsu36I site, HzSNPV (Bsu36I' ) , was determined by measuring the LC50s and ET50s, respectively, in H. zea neonates . Duplicate LC50 assays (Tables 6 and 7) showed that the elimination of the Bsu36I site had little or no effect on the infectivity of the virus, and duplicate ET50 assays (Tables 8 and 9) showed that the virulence of the modified virus was also essentially unaltered. The
Bsu36I' virus was then used for the construction of all subsequent virus constructions since the ability to insert genes into the viral genome by direct cloning offers a rapid and useful means of constructing viral recombinants [Ernst et al . (1994) Nucl . Acids Res . 2_2.:2855-2856; Lu and Miller (1996) Biotechniques 2JL-.63-68] and insertion of Bsu36I and Sse8387I sites into the egt region of the Bsu36I' virus simplifies direct cloning into this region.
The next step in genetically engineering HzSNPV was to insert a marker gene, the E. coli GUS gene, into the egt gene of HzSNPV and screen for viruses which produced a blue color in the presence of the GUS indicator, X-Gluc (see Example 4) . This virus was then used as a parental virus to construct additional HzSNPV recombinants using the presence of white plaques as a screen for double-crossover recombinants in allelic replacement.
An egt deletion virus, three tox34-expressing recombinant viruses and an egt deletion virus containing Bsu36I and Sse8387I sites within the egt locus were constructed by allelic replacement using the appropriate transfer plasmids (see Fig. 7) . Each of the tox34-expressing recombinants contained a different promoter: the D . melanogaster hsp70 promoter, the early AcMNPV DA26 (ORF 16) viral promoter or the late AcMNPV p6.9 gene (ORF 100) promoter. The infectivities and virulence of these toxin-expressing viruses were compared to HzSNPV, HzSNPV (Bsu36I') and egt deletion mutant (HzEGTdel) virus in H. zea neonates (Tables 8-11) . The LC50s were found to be similar, if not identical, for all the viruses tested. All viruses containing tox34 had significantly lower ET50s, indicating that all three promoters used were functional in H. zea larvae and that toxin gene expression reduced the ΞT50s substantially. The recombinant expressing tox34 under the control of the viral DA26 promoter exhibited a lower ET50 than the recombinant containing the tox34 gene under the control of the Drosophila hsp70 promoter in this species. The AcMNPV p6.9 promoter also consistently performed better than the hsp70 promoter and was similar to, although possibly slightly less effective than, the AcMNPV DA26 promoter. The VEGTDA26 tox34 virus decreased the ET50 to less than 40 h, 40% less than wt HzSNPV. The ET50s for HzEGTdel was not lower than those for HzSNPV wt and HzSNPV (Bsu36I') .
The HzSNPV egt gene is located between 93.1 and 94.5 m.u. of the
HzSNPV map and is predicted to encode a 515 amino acid polypeptide with less than 50% sequence identity with other known baculovirus EGTs. Like other baculovirus egt gene products [O'Reilly et al . (1992) Insect Biochem . Molec . Biol . ,2_2: 313-320] , it is predicted to have a cleavable signal sequence at its amino-terminus and lacks a C-terminal transmembrane domain. The HzSNPV EGT has the seven amino acids which are found to be absolutely conserved among all EGTs and UDP-glycosyltransferases [O'Reilly, D.R. (1995) Insect . Biochem . Molec . Biol . 2_5: 541-550] . Domain II of EGTs [O'Reilly (1995) supra] from amino acid residues 254-267, is the most conserved region among all baculovirus EGTs including the HzSNPV EGT. In contrast to the AcMNPV EGT [O'Reilly et al . (1992) Insect Biochem . Molec . Biol . 22:313-320] , the HzSNPV EGT is unable to use UDP-galactose as a substrate. The site for UDP-sugar binding is predicted to lie within domains III and IV of the EGT polypeptides (O'Reilly (1995) supra] . HzSNPV EGT shares the most sequence identity to the MbNPV EGT (70%) and the most similarity to S1NPV (Table 7; see also Fig. 11A for phylogenetic tree) .
Although deletion of the AcMNPV egt gene reduced the LT50 of this virus in two different species [O'Reilly and Miller (1991)
BioTechnology .9:1086-1089], a similar reduction in the rate of mortality was not observed for the HzSNPV egt deletion mutant in H. zea neonate larvae. Because wild-type HzSNPV acts more quickly than wild- type AcNPV in its respective host, the effect of egt (e.g. 15% reduction in LT50) appears too subtle to be observed in this species or in this larval instar. Expression of egt is known to block the molting of the host insect [O'Reilly and Miller (1991) supra] and also prevents the degeneration of the malpighian tubules during the infection process [Flipsen et al . (1995) J. Virol . £9:4529-4532] . Promoter-dependent effects on tox34 expression and larval paralysis have been previously reported in AcMNPV [Tomalski and Miller (1992) BioTechnology 10:545-549; Lu et al . (1996) BioTechnigues 21:63- 68]. Both the Drosophila hsp70 and viral p6.9 promoters were considerably more effective than the polh promoter in reducing the ET50 of AcMNPV in both T. ni and S. frugiperda , and the relative effectiveness of the p6.9 and hsp70 promoters was species-dependent [Lu et al. (1996) Biol . Control . 2=320-332]. The DA26 promoter, however, was less effective in reducing the ET50 of AcMNPV in these two species than the polh, p6.9 or hsp70 promoters. We compared the effects of placing tox34 under the control of Drosophila hsp70, AcMNPV DA26, or AcMNPV p6.9 promoters within the context of the HzSNPV genome in H. zea neonates and found that all toxin-expressing recombinant viruses had a reduced effective time to paralysis/mortality relative to wt HzSNPV. The most effective viral promoter was AcMNPV DA26 although it was only slightly more effective than the AcMNPV p6.9 promoter. The D. melanogaster hsp70 promoter was somewhat less effective under these conditions than either the hsp70 or DA26 promoters. Both early and late AcMNPV promoters were effective in the context of the HzSNPV genome. Without wishing to be bound by theory, it is predicted that the equivalent HzSNPV promoters are as or more effective than the AcMNPV promoters .
We have successfully improved the properties of HzSNPV as a pesticide through genetic engineering technology to provide the first recombinant HzSNPV. With an ET50 of less than 40 hrs, the HzDA26tox34 recombinant is the fastest acting baculovirus reported to date . Genetically engineered HzSNPV derivatives are also useful as gene expression vectors.
The mature form of the Tox34 protein secreted from insect cells infected with recombinant AcMNPV expressing tox34 [Tomalski and Miller (1991) Nature 352 : 82-85] is thought to be the same form as that produced by mites. TxP-I is synthesized as a precursor protein of 291 amino acids; the first 39 amino acids are a signal sequence absent from the mature secreted product. Since mature Tox34 is a secreted protein that must interact with the secretory pathway of infected insect cells, we investigated the influence of different signal peptides on expression and secretion of Tox34. Secretion of some heterologous proteins from baculovirus-infected cells appears to be affected by the nature of the signal sequence [Tessier et al . (1991) Gene 98 :177-183 ; O'Reilly et al . (1995) Insect Biochem . Mol . Biol . .25.: 475-485] .
Three different signal sequences derived from the sarcotoxin IA gene of Sarcophaga peregrina (flesh fly) , the cuticle gene of D. melanogaster, and a homolog of tox34 ( tox21A) were substituted for the native tox34 signal sequence (see Figs. 1A-1E) and placed under control of the modified polyhedrin promoter PsynXIV in AcMNPV (Fig. 2A-2C) . The levels of Tox34 expressed in recombinant virus-infected SF-21 cells and secreted into the tissue culture media at 48 h pi were compared by
Western blot analysis using polyclonal antibody specific for Tox34 (Fig. 3) . Intracellular levels of toxin produced at 48 h p.i. varied (Fig. 3, lanes 1-6). Expression from vSp-BSigtox34 produced less intracellular toxin protein (Fig. 3, compare lanes 2 and 3) while vSp- DCtox34 and vSp-tox34 infected-cells produced similar amounts of intracellular toxin (Fig. 3, compare lanes 2 and 4). In contrast, intracellular levels of toxin in vSp-tox21A/tox34 infected cells were approximately 3-fold higher than in vSP-tox34 infected cells (Fig. 3, lanes 2 and 5) . No Tox34 was detected in wild-type AcMNPV infected cells (Fig. 3, lane 1). The 15-fold reduction of intracellular toxin in vSp-tox21A infected cells relative to vSp-tox34 (Fig. 3, lane 6) probably reflects inefficient recognition of Tox21A by the Tox34 antibody. Toxin produced in and secreted from cells infected with vSp- BSigtox34 and vSp-DCtox34 appear to be about 5 kDa smaller than Tox34. Without wishing to be bound by any particular theory, this is believed to represent differences in the site or efficiency of cleavage governed by the alternate signal sequences. The N-terminal sequence of TxP-I is known [Tomalski et al . (1989) Toxicon 22:1151-1167]; the N-terminal sequence of mature recombinant Tox34 has not be empirically determined.
The heterogeneity in sizes of intracellular Tox34 in vSp- tox21A/tox34 infected cells has been observed previously [Tomalski and Miller (1991) Nature 352:82-85; Tomalski and Miller (1992) Bio/Technology 1J): 545-549] and probably represents precursors of the mature Tox34 protein. The ratio of the precursor to the mature forms of Tox34 increases with time p.i. [Tomalski and Miller (1992) supra], likely reflecting the fact that the cell's secretory pathway becomes functionally compromised during the later phases of infection [Jarvis et al. (1993) J. Biol . Chem . 268 : 16754-16762] . Because there are 3- fold higher levels of toxin expressed in cells infected with vSp- tox21A/tox34 than with vSp-tox34, the presence of these heterogenous products suggests that the former is expressed at higher levels than the latter and/or that the tox21A signal sequence is not efficiently processed. Both scenarios can lead to an accumulation of unprocessed forms of Tox34 in vSp-tox21A/tox34 infected cells.
None of the changes to the signal sequence of tox34 ultimately increased the amount of secreted toxin. The amount of Tox34 secreted by vSp-tox34, vSp-DCtox34, and vSp-tox2l/tox34 infected cells at 48 h p.i. was similar (Fig. 3, lanes 8, 10, 11) while Tox34 was undetectable in the supernatant fractions of vSp-BSigtox34 and vSp-tox21A infected cells (Fig. 3, lanes 9 and 12) . Again, and without wishing to be bound by any particular theory, the apparent absence of Tox21A is believed to be due to poor reactivity with the Tox34 antibody. The low levels of secreted toxin from vSp-BSigtox34 infected cells is believed due to translational or post-translational problems since the levels of the toxin transcripts appear to be similar. The additional glycine residue added to the N-terminal sequence of the mature toxin may be responsible for this effect.
Neonate T. ni larvae were infected per os with occluded virus from each recombinant virus to evaluate the effect of changing the signal sequence of tox34 on the LC50 (concentration of occluded virus required to kill 50% of the test insects) and the ET50 (time required to paralyze or kill 50% of the test insects) of each recombinant virus
(Table 2) .
No significant differences in the LC50 for the different viruses were observed; thus, the expression of tox34 does not compromise ability to initiate infection relative to wild-type. In all cases, per os infection of T. ni larvae by tox34 expressing viruses resulted in paralysis. vSp-tox34 and vSp-DCtox34 infected larvae were paralyzed approximately 50% faster than wild-type AcMNPV, vSp-tox21A and vSp- tox21A/tox34 about 35% faster than wild-type, and vSp-BSigtox34 about 25% faster. The ET50 of vSp-tox34 is in close agreement with previously published results [Tomalski and Miller (1992) supra] ; however, the ET50 of vSp-tox21A is approximately 15 h longer than what was reported for the same construct by Tomalski et al . (1993) Toxicon 31:319-326.
The ET50 values for vSp-tox34 and vSp-DCtox34 correlate well with the levels of toxin detected in the supernatants of infected cells; however, the ET50 of vSp-tox21A/tox34 was longer than vSp-tox34 and vSp- DCtox34 even though similar levels of toxin were secreted. This suggests that not all of the secreted toxin from vSp-tox21A/Tox34 infected cells is biologically active. Although no toxin was found in the supernatant from vSp-BSigtox34 infected cells, neonate T. ni larvae infected per os with vSp-BSigtox34 exhibited paralysis, indicating that the threshold level of toxin required for paralysis of T. ni neonates is low or that some insect tissues are more efficient in producing active toxin from this construct. Fourth instar T. ni injected hemocoelically with 2.0 x 105 pfu of vSp-BSigtox34 exhibited paralysis after 48 h. In general, the level of toxin secreted into culture supernatant was predictive of virus performance in vivo . SI nuclease analysis was performed to determine whether the low level of toxin produced by vSp-BSigtox34 infected cells was at the level of transcription or translation. A 648 bp or a 668 bp Hindlll- Ndel probe, uniquely end-labeled at the Ndel site, was used in SI nuclease protection assays with total RNA isolated from vSp-BSigtox34 or vSp-tox34 infected cells at 0, 6, 12, 24 and 36 h p.i. Protected probe corresponding to transcriptional initiation within the TAAG motif of the PsynXIV promoter was observed as early as 12 h p.i., and continued to increase through 36 h p.i., with RNA prepared from both vSp- BSigtox34- and vSp-tox34-infected cells. The amount of protected probe at each time point was similar between the two viruses, indicating that the low level of toxin produced in vSp-BSigtox34 infected cells was not due to reduced transcription.
Interestingly, another transcriptional start site was mapped to a TAAG sequence on the complementary strand within the native tox34 signal sequence which was not present in RNA isolated from vSp- BSigtox34 infected cells . Primer extension analysis confirmed that this additional start site corresponded to the reverse TAAG motif. Similar interference from duplex RNA in SI nuclease and primer extension analysis has been described [Ooi and Miller (1991) J. Gen . Virol . 21=527-534; Lu and Carstens (1992) Virology 190:201-209] . This result had potential relevance to tox34 expression since the formation of duplex RNA at the 5' end of tox34 mRNA can inhibit its translation, thereby decreasing Tox34 levels.
vSp-tox34 infection of neonate T. ni larvae ( tox34 expressed under the transcriptional control of the hybrid very late promoter, p synsιv) resulted in paralysis of larvae about 45% faster than wild-type. Therefore, it was of interest to evaluate the effect of promoters for potentially earlier expression of tox34 in infected cells as a means to further decrease the ET50 of tox34-expressing recombinants, four recombinant viruses expressing tox34 under control of the D . melanogaster HSP70 promoter (vHSP70tox34) , the early AcMNPV DA26 gene promoter (vDA26tox34) , the late AcMNPV 6.9K DNA binding protein gene promoter (vp6.9tox34) , and the very late PsynXIV promoter (vSp-tox34) were constructed (see Fig. 2A and the Examples) . vETL-tox34, in which the P. tri tici Tox34 toxin coding sequence is expressed under the control of the early ETL promoter [Tomalski and Miller (1992) Bio/Technology 10. - 545-549] was not as desirable as the vp6.9tox34 or the vHSP70tox34 as an insect control agent.
Analyses of time courses of tox34 expression in TN-368 cells infected with these four viruses and wild-type AcMNPV illustrated the relative levels and timing of tox34 expression in these cells. Western blot analysis using antibody against Tox34 detected Tox34 in the supernatants and in cell lysates of virus-infected cells at 0, 6, 12, 24 and 48 h p.i. (Figs. 4A-4B) . No Tox34 was detected in wild-type AcMNPV-infected cells throughout the time course of infection in either the cell lysate or supernatant fractions (Fig. 4A and 4B, lanes 1 to
5) . Surprisingly, Tox34 was not found in the lysates from vHSP70tox34- infected cells, and it was first observed in the supernatant at 24 h p.i., with increased levels found by 48 h p.i. (Figure 4B, lanes 9 and 10) . This lack of accumulation in the cellular fraction suggests that Tox34 is efficiently secreted from the infected cell. The levels of
Tox34 in vDA26tox34-infected cells were too low to detect in either intracellular or extracellular fractions (Figs. 4A and 4B, lanes 11 to 15) . vp6. tox34-infected cells showed the highest expression of Tox34 of all promoters tested, and substantial levels of Tox34 were detected in both fractions at both 24 and 48 h p.i. (Figs. 4A and 4B, lanes 19 and 20) . Expression of Tox34 in vp6.9tox34-infected cells was at least 24 h earlier than tox34 under very late promoter control, where Tox34 was not detected until 48 h p.i. (Figs. 1A and 4B, compare lanes 19 and 24, and lanes 20 and 25) . The two immunoreactive species found in vp6.9tox34- and vSp-tox34-infected cell lysates represent mature Tox34 and its unprocessed, precursor form.
The response of neonate S. frugiperda (Table 3) or T. ni larvae (Table 4) to infection by virus expression of tox34 under the control of different promoters was studied to determine whether the time to paralysis was affected by the promoter and whether there were species- specific differences. In both species the LC50s of all four recombinants were similar to the LC50 of wild-type AcMNPV. The higher LC50 values for wild-type AcMNPV in S. frugiperda (about 200 fold) relative to T. ni neonates have been previously documented [Clem et al .
(1994) J. Virol . 1 S_ : 1551-1556] . In T. ni larvae, vp6.9tox34 performed best, reducing time to paralysis by about 60% compared to wild- type, and vp6.9tox34 outperformed vSp-tox34 by 20%. A similar ET50 was found for vp6.9tox34 in S . frugiperda larvae, but in this case vHSP70tox34 performed as well, if not better. An additional species-specific difference in ET50 was found with vDA26tox34, which was more effective in S. frugiperda larvae than T. ni larvae by about 10 h. These results indicate that there are differences in the relative strengths of these two "early" promoters in the two insect species.
To determine if a promoter-specific effect was detectable in cell culture, time course studies of tox34 expression in vHSP70tox34- and vDA26tox34-infected SF-21 and TN-368 cells were performed (Fig. 5) . Because levels of Tox34 secreted from vHSP70tox34 and vDA26tox34 were low to undetectable (Figs. 4A and 4B) , proteins in the supernatant fraction were precipitated with 20% trichloroacetic acid (TCA) prior to separating the proteins by SDS-PAGE and detecting Tox34 by immunoblot analysis. Comparison of the relative levels of Tox34 secreted by each cell line revealed that the HSP70 promoter was significantly stronger than the DA26 gene promoter in both cell lines (Fig. 5, compare lanes
1-5 with lanes 11-15, and lanes 6-10 with lanes 16-20) . A comparison of each promoter in the two cell lines showed that detectable levels of Tox34 from both the DA26 and HSP70 promoters appear at least 24 h earlier in SF-21 than in TN-368 cells. Longer exposures of this blot detected Tox34 as early as 6 and 12 h p.i. in the supernatants of vHSP70-tox34-infected SF-21 and TN-368 cells, respectively. This analysis of the level and timing of tox34 expression with vHSP70tox34 and vDA26tox34 in the two cell lines at the protein level corresponds well with the relative time to paralysis in neonate bioassays (Tables 4 and 5) .
SI nuclease analysis revealed that a transcriptional start site was located on the complementary strand within the native tox34 signal sequence. Transcripts initiating from this site could potentially form duplex RNA with tox34 transcripts in infected cells to interfere with the translation of tox34 .
Oligonucleotide site-directed mutagenesis was performed on pSp- tox34 and pSp-p6.9tox34 to change the CTTAA motif to a CTTGA motif (See Fig. IE) within the tox34 signal coding sequence without altering the amino acid sequence of the signal peptide. The effect of this altered signal peptide coding sequence was tested using recombinant virus expressing the modified tox34 gene ( tox34m) under 6.9K (vp6.9tox34m) or PsynXIV (vSp-tox34m) promoter control. Cell lysates and supernatants were examined for Tox34 or Tox34m expression from 18 to 48 h p.i. (Figs. 6A and 6B) . In vSp-tox34- and vSp-tox34m- infected cells, Tox34 was detected in both fractions at 48 h p.i. Expression of Tox34 or Tox34m from the 6.9K promoter was observed at 18 h p.i. The relative levels of intracellular Tox34 were approximately 2 to 3 fold higher in cells infected with vp6.9tox34m than with vp6.9tox34, indicating that removal of the reverse TAAG motif increased the intracellular levels of Tox34 protein. This difference was not observed in vSp-tox34 and vSp-tox34m infected cells. Without wishing to be bound by theory, it is believed that the complementary TAAG motif acts as a late rather than a very late promoter during infection, and consequently, RNA initiating from this promoter primarily effects translation from tox34 expressed from the late 6.9K promoter. No differences in the extracellular levels of Tox34 were observed between vp6.9tox34 and vp6.9tox34m infected cells (Fig. 5B) . It is possible that the level of Tox34 produced in vp6.9tox34-infected cells has overwhelmed the cell's secretory pathway so that even higher levels of precursor Tox34 produced in vp6.9tox34m infected cells do not affect the level of secreted Tox34.
vp6.9tox34m and vSp-tox34m were also used in per os infection of neonate S. frugiperda and T. ni larvae to determine whether there were any differences in the LC50 and ET50 of these recombinant viruses. No differences were observed in the LC50s of each virus in either species relative to wild-type AcMNPV (Table 6). The ET50 of vp6.9tox34m was moderately longer than vp6.9tox34 by 4.5 and 5.6 h in S . frugiperda and T. ni larvae, respectively, and was just outside the limits of standard error. vSp-tox34m performed better than vSp-tox34 in both species. Its effect seemed to be greater in S. frugiperda larvae, decreasing the time to paralysis by about 7 h.
None of the heterologous signal sequences tested increased the levels of secreted Tox34 in cell culture, and none improved the time to paralysis of T. ni infected with these viral recombinants. Promoter choice, however, did significantly influence the timing and level of secreted toxin in cell culture, and surprisingly, certain promoters dramatically improved the properties of the virus as a biopesticide .
The major effect of changing the signal sequence was to affect the intracellular levels of Tox34. The levels of toxin in vSp- tox21A/tox34 infected cells accumulated to a higher level than in vSp- tox34 infected cells at 48 h p.i., suggesting that the tox21A signal sequence was less efficient at directing the secretion of Tox34 than the native tox34 signal sequence. Very low amounts of toxin were detected in vSp-BSigtox34 infected cells even though similar levels of toxin transcripts were found in vSp-BSigtox34 and vSp-tox34 infected cells. The stability of Tox34 may be affected as a result of the change in the signal sequence or the N-terminal residue of the mature polypeptide. This signal sequence has been used successfully to promote the secretion of active prothoracicotropic hormone using the baculovirus expression system [O'Reilly et al . (1995) supra]. The addition of an extra glycine residue to the amino terminus of the mature Tox34 may have destabilized rather than stabilized Tox34.
Modification of the native tox34 signal sequence to remove the complementary TAAG motif did not increase the level of secreted Tox34 in cell culture, but it did significantly increase the levels of intracellular Tox34 and its precursors. This suggested that while removal of the TAAG sequence increased expression of Tox34 in the cell, processing and transport through the secretory pathway was the limiting step in obtaining increased extracellular toxin levels. A decrease in the ET50 of vSp-tox34m relative to vSp-tox34 in S. frugiperda larvae was observed, suggesting that there was some in vivo effect of altering this reverse TAAG motif. These results suggest that it is advantageous to use this modified signal for those promoters (e.g. HSP70) which are expressed earlier and continue to be expressed late in infection but produce less toxin than the threshold level required for paralysis .
All of the toxin-expressing recombinant viruses (regardless of promoter) reduced the effective time to paralysis/mortality relative to wild-type AcMNPV. The most effective viral promoter in the two species tested was the late 6.9K DNA binding protein gene promoter of AcMNPV.
Tox34 under 6.9K promoter control was expressed both earlier (at least
24 h) and at greater levels than tox34 under control of a hybrid promoter composed of both late and very late promoter elements
[Tomalski and Miller (1992) supra] . Superior expression mediated by the 6. 9K promoter over either the pl O or polyhedrin gene promoters has been previously reported with respect to the expression of juvenile hormone esterase and β-galactosidase [Bonning et al . (1994) J. Gen Virol . 2.L: 1551-1556] . The earlier synthesis and secretion of Tox34 in vp6.9tox34 infected SF-21 cells reflects the performance of the recombinant virus in vivo.
Tox34 under control of the early DA26 promoter was the least effective in both species, a result also found with another early promoter (ETL) of AcMNPV [Tomalski and Miller (1992) supra] . The results indicate that although tox34 is expressed earlier in these cells, it is not initially expressed at the threshold level needed to paralyze larvae. The hsp70 promoter has been shown to be a relatively strong promoter when compared to early viral promoters [Morris and Miller (1992) J. Virol . £6:7397-7405] and this promoter was found to drive higher levels of tox34 expression than the DA26 promoter in both
T. ni and S. frugiperda . Surprisingly, tox34 expressed under the control of the hsp70 promoter resulted in the shortest ET50 in S. frugiperda larvae, even through overall levels of Tox34 secreted under the hsplO promoter were substantially lower than tox34 expressed under 6. 9K promoter control. This indicates that tox34 expression from a strong constitutive promoter can, in at least some cases, be more effective than expression from a strong late viral promoter. The differences observed for ET50 values for vHSP70tox34 and vDA26tox34 in the two species suggests that the effectiveness of a particular promoter is host-dependent .
As discussed above, there is a longfelt need in the art for biological pesticides which are especially selective for target insect pests. Baculoviruses are being considered to fill this need, but most baculoviruses require from four to fourteen days to kill their insect hosts, and during this time the insects continue to feed and effect significant damage to crops and other vegetation. Genetic modifications of baculovirus genomes have resulted in certain improvements of baculoviruses as insect control agents by reducing the time to mortality in infected insects. The expression of insect predacious mite toxins which are specific for insects by recombinant baculoviruses has led to reduction of feeding time in infected insects; the present invention provides further improvement in such baculoviruses. Changes made to the signal sequence of the insect- specific toxin did not improve the level of secreted mite toxin, and in fact, the specific changes to the signal sequence tested resulted in an increase in the time to paralysis of infected insects. Surprisingly, however, promoter choice was a key factor in improving the time of expression, increasing the levels of toxin protein, and reducing the time to paralysis in a host-dependent manner. Without wishing to be bound by theory, it is proposed that the most effective promoter for driving toxin expression in most insect hosts is either an AcMNPV 6. 9K promoter or a heat shock promoter, in particular, the Drosophila hsp70 promoter.
Insecticidal compositions suitable for applications to plants to control insect pests comprise an agriculturally suitable carrier and an insect control agent. Application of an insecticidal composition of this invention can protect plants from insect pests by reducing feeding by and killing of susceptible insects.
The skilled artisan knows how to choose an insect control agent, e.g. , an insect virus, which is suitable for the control of a particular insect pest. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the insect pests can be exposed to the insect control agent of the present invention by conventional methods including ingestion, inhalation or direct contact of the insect control agent.
A primary use of the genetically engineered baculoviruses of the present invention will be as components of agricultural compositions for applying to plants, plant environments or distributed in baits to effect the biological control of insect pests . It will also be possible to use the insect control agents of the present invention in the control of other insect pests with the appropriate choice of the particular organism genetically modified to express an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin. For example, there are baculoviruses known to specifically infect each of mosquitoes, beetles and fleas, besides the common Lepidopterans . The target insect guides the skilled artisan in the selection of the insect control agent expressing the paralytic toxin, and the particular agent constrains the selection of an appropriate promoter sequence . Many variations of preparing such agriculturally suitable and/or environmentally acceptable compositions for insect control are known in the art .
The concentration of the genetically engineered baculovirus required to produce insecticidally effective compositions for the control of an insect pest depends on the type of organism and neurotoxin used and the formulation of the composition. The insecticidally effective concentration of the insect control agent within the composition can readily be determined experimentally, as understood by the skilled artisan. For example, the insecticidally effective concentration of a virus can be readily determined using bioassay techniques known to the art.
Agricultural compositions for control of insect pests of plants must be suitable for agricultural use and dispersal in fields. Similarly, compositions for the control of other insect pests must be environmentally acceptable. Generally, components of the composition must be non-phytotoxic and not detrimental to the integrity of the occluded virus. Foliar applications must not damage or injure plant leaves. In addition to appropriate solid or, more preferably, liquid carriers, agricultural compositions may include sticking and adhesive agents, emulsifying and wetting agents, but no components which deter insect feeding or any viral functions. It may also be desirable to add components which protect the insect control agent from UV inactivation or components which serve as adjuvants to increase the potency and/or virulence of an entomopathogen . Agricultural compositions for insect pest control may also include agents which stimulate insect feeding.
Reviews describing methods of application of biological insect control agents and methods and compositions agricultural application are available. See, for example, Couch and Ignoffo (1981) in Microbial Control of Pests and Plant Disease 1970-1980, Burges (ed.) , chapter 34, pp. 621-634; Corke and Rishbeth, ibid, chapter 39, pp. 717-732; Brockwell (1980) in Methods for Evaluating Ni trogen Fixation , Bergersen
(ed.) pp. 417-488; Burton (1982) in Biological Ni trogen Fixation Technology for Tropical Agricul ture, Graham and Harris (eds.) pp. 105- 114; and Roughley (1982) ibid, pp. 115-127; The Biology of Baculoviruses , Vol. II, supra, and references cited in the above. Wettable powder compositions incorporating baculoviruses for use in insect control are described in EP 697,170 (Ahmed, published Feb. 21, 1996) incorporated by reference herein.
Monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies, preferably monoclonal, specifically reacting with a toxin protein encoded by a particular coding sequence identified using the present methods may be made by methods known in the art. See, e.g., Harlow and Lane (1988) Antibodies : A Laboratory Manual , Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Plainview, NY and Goding (1986) Monoclonal Antibodies : Principles and Practice, 2d ed. , Academic Press, New York.
Standard techniques for cloning, DNA isolation, amplification and purification, for enzymatic reactions involving DNA ligase, DNA polymerase, restriction endonucleases and the like, and various separation techniques are those known and commonly employed by those skilled in the art. A number of standard techniques are described in O'Reilly et al . (1992) Baculovirus Expression Vectors : A Laboratory Manual , W.H. Freeman, New York, NY; Sambrook et al . (1989) Molecular Cloning, Second Edition, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Plainview, New York; Maniatis et al . (1982) Molecular Cloning, Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Plainview, New York; Wu (ed. ) (1993) Meth . Enzymol . 218, Part I; Wu (ed.) (1979) Meth Enzymol . £8; Wu et al . (eds.) (1983) Meth . Enzymol . 100 and 101; Grossman and Moldave (eds.) Meth. Enzymol . £5; Miller (ed.) (1972) Experiments in Molecular Genetics, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York;
Old and Primrose (1981) Principles of Gene Manipulation, University of California Press, Berkeley; Schleif and Wensink (1982) Practical Methods in Molecular Biology; Glover (ed.) (1985) DNA Cloning Vol. I and II, IRL Press, Oxford, UK; Hames and Higgins (eds.) (1985) Nucleic Acid Hybridization, IRL Press, Oxford, UK; and Setlow and Hollaender
(1979) Genetic Engineering: Principles and Methods, Vols . 1-4, Plenum Press, New York. Abbreviations and nomenclature, where employed, are deemed standard in the field and commonly used in professional journals such as those cited herein. Each reference cited in the present application is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
This invention is illustrated by the following examples, which are not to be construed in any way as imposing limitations on the scope thereof. It is understood that resort can be made to various other embodiments, modifications, alternatives and equivalents of the procedures materials and techniques specifically described which, after reading the description herein, may suggest themselves to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the present invention and/or the scope of the appended claims . THE EXAMPLES Example 1. Insect Cells and Viruses
All AcMNPV viruses are originally derived from AcMNPV L-l [Lee and Miller (1978) J. Virol . 22:754], and are plaque-purified and propagated in Spodoptera frugiperda IPLB-SF-21 cells (Sf cells,
Spodoptera frugiperda [Vaughn et al . (1977) Tn Vitro 13.: 213-217] or TN- 368 cells (Tn) Trichoplusia ni cells [Hink, W.F. (1970) Nature 226:466- 467] in TC-100 medium (GIBCO, Grand Island, New York) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 0.26% tryptose broth at 27°C as described previously [O'Reilly et al . (1992) Baculovirus Expression Vectors : A
Laboratory Manual , W.H. Freeman, New York, NY] . AcMNPV Viruses were titered using IPLB-SF-21 cells and the standard plaque assay as described by O'Reilly et al . (1992) supra. AcMNPV LI served as the wild-type virus for comparative purposes.
Recombinant viruses vSptox34 and vHSP70tox34 contain the tox34 coding sequence expressed under the regulatory control of the synthetic hybrid viral promoter PsynXIV [Wang et al . (1991) Gene 100:131-137] and the Drosophila melanogaster hsp70, respectively [Tomalski and Miller (1992) Bio/Technology 1CI545-549; McNitt et al . (1995) Bio . Control
5_:267-278]. vHSP70tox34 was constructed starting with pEVptox34 digested with EcoRI and Bglll to release a tox34 fragment (see U.S. Patent No. 5,266,317) and plasmid pHSP70PLVl+CAT [Morris and Miller (1992) J". Virol . £6:7397-7405] which was digested with EcoRI and Bglll to produce a vector fragment and a cat fragment, which is discarded.
The vector fragment contains the D. melanogaster hsp70 promoter with sequence from about -500 to +231 [see Toeroek and Karch (1980) Nucl . Acids Res . 8.: 3105-3123] . Insertion of the Tox34 coding sequence in the proper orientation was confirmed by restriction endonuclease analysis (digests with Xbal, Ndel, and a double digest with EcoRI and Bglll) .
The resulting transfer plasmid was cotransfected into SF21 cells with DNA of the virus vSynVl-gal, an AcMNPV derivative containing lac ZI in place of pohl . Recombinant viruses were identified by their white, occulusion-positive phenotype on Xgal plates, and their genotype was confirmed by restriction endonuclease analysis. Recombinant virus vSp- tox21A expresses the tox21A coding sequence, a homolog of the tox34 coding sequence also isolated by cDNA cloning from Pyemotes tri tici insect-predacious mites, under the regulatory control of the PSynxιv
Hz 105/UND-K cells (HzUNDK) , clonally isolated from IPLB-Hz 107S
[Corsaro et al . , (1989) J. Virol Methods 5.:283-292], were provided by Dr. Malcolm Fraser (University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN) and were maintained at 27°C in TCIOO medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 0.26% tryptose broth, as previously described [O'Reilly et al . (1992) Baculovirus Expression Vectors : A . Laboratory Manual , W. H. Freeman, new York, NY] . A plaque-purified isolate of the Elcar™ strain of HzSNPV, provided by Dr. William Rice (USDA-ARS Rice Research Center, Crawley, LA) , served as the parental wild type (wt) virus and was propagated in HzUNDK cells . HzSNPV viruses are readily available in the art .
Example 2 : EGT Assays
HzUNDK cells (2 x 106 per 60 mm dish) were infected with wt HzSNPV or AcMNPV at a multiplicity of infection of 10. After 48 h post-infection the infected cell culture supernatant was collected and transferase activity was assayed using 100 μl of supernatant with [3H] ecdysone (Dupont, NEN Research Products) and UDP-galactose or UDP- glucose serving as the substrate [O'Reilly et al . (1992) Insect Biochem . Molec . Biol . 22.: 313-320] . Ecdysone was separated from ecdysone-sugar conjugates by thin layer chromatography on silica gel plates, and the radiolabel was detected by autoradiography.
Example 3 : Identification and Sequencing- of the HzSNPV egt Gene A cosmid library of the HzSNPV genome was constructed using
SuperCos (Stratagene, La olla, CA) as the vector. Selected cosmid and plasmid clones containing HzSNPV genomic fragments were screened by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using two degenerate primers designed from two highly conserved regions of known UDP-glucosyltransfereases . The sequence (where I is inosine, Y is C or T, S is G or C, K is G or
T, M is A or C, W is A or T, H is A or C or T, B is G or T or C, V is G or C or A, and N is all four nucleotides) of the primers included a 5' terminal BamHI or EcoRI site respectively: 5' GC GGA TCC AIY GTG SWG TWY NTK GGM GG 3' (SEQ ID NO: 16) [corresponding to SVQYLGG (SEQ ID NO: 17) in the AcMNPV EGT sequence] and 5' GC GAA TTC GGM ABV MHC ACC AKN
GG 3' (SEQ ID NO: 18) [originally intended to correspond to PMVCLP (SEQ ID NO: 19) in many EGT sequences] .
PCR amplification using an HzSNPV cosmid, which spanned the Hindlll J through E fragments, and a plasmid clone containing the
Hindlll-C fragment as templates generated a PCR product of the size expected for the egt gene. The sequence of the PCR product confirmed that it was derived from the HzSNPV egt gene. The entire gene was then sequenced in both directions with the aid of synthetic oligonucleotide primers which provided sufficient overlap between contiguous sequences for confident alignments and unambiguous sequence information.
Nucleotide sequences of known egts available in GenBank were aligned using the Pileup and Boxshade programs. (See Fig. 11B-11C) Amino acid sequences were compared using the Bestfit analysis (Genetics Computer Group, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI) . Phylogenetic relationships based on the sequence comparison are shown diagrammatically in Fig. 11A.
Example 4 : Construction of HzSNPV Transfer Vectors and Recombinant
HzSNPV Viruses
The egt gene was found to be located entirely within the EcoRI Q fragment. This fragment was cloned from HzSNPV into the EcoRI site of Bluescript II KS+ (Stratagene) and a 600 bp Sall/EcoRI fragment downstream of egt was removed to produce pHzEGT (Fig. 7) . pHzEGT was digested with Sail which removed an internal segment of egt and the ends filled in by Klenow. The vector fragment was then ligated to a blunt-ended fragment containing the E. coli -glucuronidase gene (GUS) , under the control of the D . melanogaster hsp70 promoter, and Bsu36I and Sse8387I sites on either side of GUS to form pEGThspGUS . Additionally it was ligated to a DA26 promoted-, p6.9 promoted-, or a D . melanogaster HSP70 promoted- tox34 gene. The DA26 and p6.9 promoters were derived from AcMNPV [Lu et al . (1995) Biol Control . 2=320-332]. A plasmid with a deletion in egt was made from SalI-digested pHzEGT by ligation of the vector fragment. The resulting plasmid, pEGTdel, was used to generate a plasmid, pEGTlinker, with unique Bsu36I and Sse8387I sites within egt by digesting the plasmid DNA with Sail and ligating it to an oligonucleotide with Sail cohesive ends and unique Bsu361 and Sse8387I sites (Fig. 7) . The oligonucleotide was constructed by annealing the following primers together (5' T CGA CCT CAG GGC AGC TTA AGG CCT GCA GG 3' (SEQ ID NO : 20) and 5' TCG ACC TGC AGG CCT TAA GCT GCC CTG AGG 3') (SEQ ID NO: 21).
HzSNPV was found to have a unique Bsu36I site which was located within the Hindlll-C fragment. A 2.1 kb Clal fragment containing the Bsu36I site was cloned from Hindlll-C and the region surrounding the site was sequenced. The site was eliminated from the virus by digesting viral DNA with Bsu36I, filling in with Klenow polymerase and religating the DNA. The DNA was then digested with Bsu36I again and transfected into HzUNDK cells. Viruses emerging from these transfections were plaque-purified, amplified and tested for the loss of the Bsu36I site. Selected viruses lacking the Bsu36I site were then tested for their infectivity (LC50) and virulence (LT50) in H. zea neonates .
The Bsu36I" virus, HzSNPV (Bsu361") , was allelically recombined with pEGThspGUS to create an EGT deleted virus that yielded blue plaques in HzUNDK cells in the presence of X-gluc (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl β-D-glucuronide) . Using this virus,
HzSNPV (Bsu36I") -EGThspGUS or more simply HzEGThspGUS, the following recombinant viruses were generated by allelic replacement [O'Reilly et al . (1992) Baculovirus Expression Vectors : A Laboratory Manual , W. H. Freeman, New York, NY] using transfer plasmids HzEGTdel, HzEGTDA26 ox , HzEGTpδ .9 ox34, and HzEGTHSPtox34 (Fig. 7). To enhance recombination, viral DNA was linearized with Bsu36I before transfection of viral and plasmid DNA. Virus recombinants were screened for a white, occlusion positive, plaque phenotype. Viruses were further plaque purified and then amplified. Viral DNA was analyzed by restriction endonuclease analysis to confirm allelic replacement.
Example 5 : Insect Bioassays with HzSNPV and its Derivatives
The LC50 and ET50 (mean time to effectively paralyze 50% of test larvae) of viruses were determined using neonate H. zea . Bioassays were conducted as droplet feeding assays according to the protocols developed by Hughes et al . (1986) J. Invertebr. Pa thol . 4_8: 189-192. Neonates were fed known concentrations of viral occlusion bodies (PIBs) suspended in 5% sucrose and 1 mg/ml FD&C blue #1 dye (Hilton Davis, Cincinnati, OH) by placing them in the center of a 60 mm plastic petri dish and providing them with 0.5 μl droplets of the PIB suspension pipetted on the bottom near the edge of the dish. Larvae that had ingested the PIBs within 30 mins, as determined by their blue color, were transferred to fresh diet (described as S. frugiperda diet in O'Reilly et al . (1992) Baculovirus Expression Vectors : A Laboratory Manual , W. H. Freeman, New York, NY] and monitored approximately every six hours. Five virus concentrations with 30 insects per dose were tested for each virus . ET50s were determined by the Vistat 2.1 program [Hughes, P.R. (1990) ViStat : Statistical package for the analysis of baculovirus bioassay data , Boyce Thompson Institute, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY] and LC50s were determined using Polo-PC
[Robertson and Prieler (1992) Polo-PC. In "Pesticide Bioassays wi th Arthropods . " CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL] .
Example 6 : Construction of recombinant viruses with alternate signal sequences
All recombinant viruses were constructed by allelic replacement using previously described methods [O'Reilly et al . (1992) supra] . Transfer plasmids were cotransfected into SF-21 cells with vSynVI'gal [Wang et al . (1991) supra] and recombinant viruses were selected based on a white occlusion-positive plaque phenotype. Each recombinant virus was verified using appropriate restriction endonuclease digestion analysis. All recombinant viruses contain tox34 inserted upstream of and in the opposite direction to the polyhedrin gene. The virus, vSp-BSigtox34, containing tox34 fused in frame to the sarcotoxin IA gene signal sequence from the flesh fly Sarcophaga peregrina [O'Reilly et al . (1995) supra] was constructed as follows: Two oligonucleotide primers, tox34up and tox34down, corresponding to nucleotides 118 to 138 and complementary to nucleotides 862 to 876, respectively, of tox34 (SEQ ID N0:3) [Tomalski and Miller (1991) Nature 3_52: 82-85] were used in a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify a 777 base pair fragment containing tox34 without its native signal sequence. The primer tox34up was designed to add an extra glycine residue to the N-terminus of the mature tox34 gene product (see Fig. IA and IB) : N-terminal glycine residues reportedly stabilize recombinant gene products [Bachmair et al . (1986) Science 3_4: 179-186] . The PCR- amplified product was digested with Hindlll and Smal (recognition sites incorporated into the primers) and inserted in frame into plasmid pBSig [O'Reilly et al . (1995) supra] between the EcoRI site, blunt-ended with
Mung Bean nuclease, and the Hindlll site. The resulting construct, pBSigtox34, contains tox34 fused with the sarcotoxin IA signal sequence. The junction between the signal sequence and tox34 was confirmed by sequence analysis (Fig. 2B) . In addition, the entire tox34 PCR product was sequenced to ensure that no mutations were introduced during PCR. The transfer vector, pSp-BSigtox34 , was constructed by digesting pBSigtox34 with BamHI, filling in the ends with the large fragment of DNA polymerase I (Klenow) followed by digestion with Bglll. A fragment containing BSigtox34 was gel-purified and inserted into pSp-tox34 between a blunt-ended EcoRI site and the
Bglll site placing BSigtox34 under control of the PsynXIV promoter (Figure 2A, vSp-BSigtox34) .
Recombinant virus vSp-DCtox34 (Fig. 2A) , containing tox34 fused with the Drosophila cuticle gene signal sequence (Fig. 1C) [Snyder et al . (1982) Cell 2_9: 1027-1040] was constructed by digesting the plasmid pBSIGtox34SmaI with BamHI and Smal and inserting a 24 base pair oligonucleotide containing Esp3I and BspMI sites. The plasmid pBSigtox34SmaI is a derivative of pBSigtox34 containing a Smal site at the junction between the sarcotoxin IA signal sequence and tox34 . The resulting plasmid, pEBtox34, contains two unique restriction sites (Esp3I and BspMI) upstream of the mature tox34 sequence in place of the sarcotoxin IA signal sequence. The oligonucleotide was designed so that digestion with Esp3I and BspMI and subsequent filling in of the ends with Klenow polymerase generates blunt ends into which any signal sequence can be inserted in-frame with tox34 in an optimal baculovirus late/very late AUG context [O'Reilly et al . (1992) supra]. Two complementary oligonucleotides containing the Drosophila cuticle signal sequence with an Esp3I site were annealed, digested with Esp3I, blunt- ended with Klenow, and inserted into the Esp3I and BspMI sites of pEBtox34 after the ends were filled in with Klenow. The resulting construct, pEBDCtox34, contains tox34 fused in-frame with the Drosophila cuticle signal sequence (Fig. 1C) . The correct junction between the cuticle signal sequence and tox34 was verified by sequence analysis. The Drosophila cuticle signal sequence- tox34 gene fusion
(DCtox34) was transferred into pSp-tox34 by digesting pEBDCtox34 with BamHI, filling in the ends with Klenow and digesting with Bglll. The fragment containing DCtox34 was then cloned into pSp-tox34 digested with EcoRI, blunt ended, and digested with Bglll, thus placing DCtox34 under control of the PsynXiV promoter (Fig. 2A, vSp-DCtox34) .
Recombinant virus vSp-tox21A/tox34 (Fig. 2A) containing a hybrid toxin gene composed of the mature tox34 gene fused with the tox21A signal sequence [Tomalski et al . (1993) supra] was constructed using the technique of gene splicing by overlap extension [Horton et al .
(1989) Gene 22=61-68] . First, the tox21A signal sequence was amplified with primers "a" (SEQ ID Nθ:5) and "b" (SEQ ID Nθ:6) (Fig. ID) using pBS-tox21A [Tomalski et al . (1993) supra] as a template. These primers correspond to the first 24 nucleotides of the tox21A signal sequence and are complementary to nucleotides 94 to 120 of tox34, respectively.
The mature tox34 gene was PCR amplified using two primers, one complementary to primer "b" (Fig. IA, primer "c", SEQ ID Nθ:7), and the second one complementary to nucleotides 862 to 876 [Tomalski and Miller (1991) supra] at the 3' end of tox34 that was previously used to amplify tox34 in vSp-BSigtox34 (tox34down, see above) . The PCR products from these two independent amplifications were combined and further amplified using primer "a" and tox34down, which resulted in a single fragment containing tox34 with the tox21A signal sequence (tox21A/tox34) . Tox21A/tox34 was digested with EcoRI and Bglll (recognition sites incorporated into primers "a" and tox34up) and cloned into the corresponding sites in pSp-tox34 (see Fig. 2A) .
Example 7 : Construction of recombinant AcMNPV viruses with tox34 under control of different cellular and viral promoters vp6.9tox34 and vDA26tox34 (Fig. 2B) were generated using allelic replacement as described previously [O'Reilly et al . (1992) supra] using the transfer plasmids described below. p6.9tox34 was constructed by cloning a 933 bp EcoRI fragment containing tox34 from pSp-tox34 into p6.9hc between a Bglll site and a Kpnl site blunt-ended with T4 DNA polymerase. p6.9hc is a reporter plasmid containing the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene (cat) under control of the late 6. 9K core DNA binding protein gene promoter of AcMNPV [Todd et al . (1996) J. Virol . 29- = 2307-2317] . The transfer vector, pSp-p6.9tox34 , was constructed by cloning a 1.1 kb EcoRI/EcoRV fragment from p6.9tox34 containing tox34 under 6. 9K promoter [Wilson et al . (1987) J. Virol . £1:661-666] control into pSp-tox34 digested with EcoRI and EcoRV (see Fig. 2B) .
vDA26tox34 was constructed using two oligonucleotide primers corresponding to nucleotides -283 to -264 and complementary to -22 to -
1 of the AUG of the early DA26 gene mRNA of AcMNPV [O'Reilly et al . (1990) J. Gen . Virol . 21=1029-1037]. The 290 bp PCR product was digested with EcoRV and Bglll (recognition sites incorporated into the primers) and cloned between the EcoRV and Bglll sites of pCAPCAT [Thiem and Miller (1990) supra] reported plasmid containing cat under control of the late capsid protein gene promoter of AcMNPV [Thiem and Miller (1989) J. Virol . £3:4489-4497]. The resulting construct, pDA26CAT, contains the DA26 gene promoter in place of capsid protein gene promoter. A 933 bp fragment containing tox34 was removed from pSp- tox34 by digestion with EcoRI, blunt-ended with Klenow, and cloned into pDA26CAT digested with Bglll and Kpnl and treated with T4 DNA polymerase. This construct was digested with EcoRI and EcoRV, and a 1.2 kb fragment containing tox34 under DA26 promoter control was inserted into the corresponding sites of pSp-p6.9tox34 resulting in the transfer vector pSp-DA26tox34 (see Fig. 2B)
Example 8 : Construction of recombinant viruses without a reverse TAAG sequence in the native tox34 signal sequence Viruses vp6.9tox34m and vSp-tox34m (Fig. 2C) , with a mutated reverse TAAG sequence in the native tox34 signal sequence (Fig. IE), were generated by site-directed mutagenesis of transfer plasmids pSp- p6.9tox34 and pSp-tox34 using the Transformer Kit (Clontech, Palo Alto, California) according to the manufacturer's protocol. Two primers, a selection primer 5' -GGG TCG ACA CAG CTG CAG CTC-3' (SEQ ID NO: 8) which eliminates a Bglll site in both parent plasmids, and a mutagenic primer 5' -GCC ATT ATC AAT CAA GGA AAT AT-3' (base change is underlined; SEQ ID NO: 9), complementary to nucleotides 104 to 126 of tox34 [Tomalski and Miller (1991) supra] , which eliminates the reverse TAAG sequence were used with the kit. Transfer plasmids, pSp-p6.9tox34m and pSp-tox34m, were sequenced to verify that the base change was present in the tox34 signal sequence.
Example 9 : Time course of tox34 expression in insect cells
SF-21 or TN-368 cells (1.0 x 106 cells per 35 mm plate) were infected with virus at a multiplicity of infection of 10 plaque forming units (pfu) per cell. At various times post- infection (p.i.) the tissue culture media were collected, and the cells were lysed in 2X electrophoresis sample buffer [O'Reilly et al . (1992) supra] . Proteins from cell lysates and extracellular fluids were analyzed by SDS-PAGE on 10% polyacrylamide gels, transblotted onto Millipore Immobilon polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membranes (Millipore, Bedford, Massachusetts) , and probed with a polyclonal antibody specific for Tox34 [McNitt et al. (1995) supra; Tomalski et al . (1989) supra]. Tox34 was visualized using the ECL Western blotting detection kit
(Amersham Corp., Arlington Heights, Illinois) and quantitated using a Molecular Dynamics densitometer 300A (Sunnyvale, California) .
Example 10: RNA isolation and SI nuclease analysis Total RNA was isolated from vSp-BSigtox34 and vSp-tox34 infected
SF-21 cells at various times p.i. by the guanidinium isothiocyanate method [Chirgwin et al . (1979) Biochemistry 24:5294-52991. SI nuclease analysis of tox34 transcripts in vSp-BSigtox34 or vSp-tox34 infected cells was performed using 25 μg of total RNA and either a 648 bp or a 668 bp Ndel-Hindlll fragment uniquely end-labeled at the Ndel site.
DNA-RNA hybridization was performed with 80% formamide-40 mM piperazine-N,N' -bis (2-ethanesulfonic acid) (PIPES) -0.4 M NaCl-1 mM EDTA at 30°C overnight. SI nuclease reactions were carried out as described in Sambrook et al . (1989) supra.
Example 11 : Larval bioassays for AcMNPV and Recombinants
Polyhedral inclusion bodies (PIBs) were prepared by infecting fifth instar Spodoptera frugiperda larvae with 2.0 x 105 pfu of budded AcMNPV from each of the recombinant viruses . PIBs were isolated as previously described [Eldridge et al . (1992) Biol . Control 2.: 104-110] .
The LC50 (concentration of occluded viruses required to kill 50% of the test larvae) and the ETS0 (mean time to effectively paralyze or kill 50% of the test larvae) of toxin-expressing viruses and wild-type AcMNPV were determined using neonate Trichoplusia ni or S. frugiperda as previously described [Tomalski and Miller (1992) supra] . Six virus concentrations with 60 insects per dose were used to test each virus. LC50 and ET50 data were analyzed by Probit analysis [Daum, R.J. (1970) Nature 226 :466-467] and ViStat 2.1 analysis [Hughes (1990) ViStat: Statistical package for the analysis of baculovirus bioasεay data, Boyce Thompson Institute, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY] , respectively. All bioassays were performed at least twice and the results presented represent an average of the results.
Example 12 : Recombinant AcMNPV Virus Construction pEV-Tox34 was constructed by inserting the EcoRI fragment containing the Tox34 coding sequence into EcoRI-cut pEVmodXIV, which supplied the powerful LSXIV promoter and sequences flanking the polyhedrin gene of AcMNPV. DNA of wild-type AcMNPV and pEV-Tox34 were cotransfected into insect cells as described in Miller et al . (1986) supra, and a recombinant virus was isolated and designated vEV-Tox34 after selection on the basis of its occlusion-negative phenotype and screening for the proper allelic replacement events by restriction endonuclease analysis and Southern hybridization.
Expression of the Tox34 gene in vEV-Tox34-infected insect cells was tested as follows. Sf21 cells were separately infected with AcMNPV and vEV-Tox34 as described in Lee et al . (1978) supra; Miller et al . (1986) supra, and the cell culture fluids from control (uninfected) , AcMNPV and vEV-Tox34-infected cells were collected after 48 hrs of infection. Larvae of the wax moth Galleria mellonella were each injected with 5 microliter aliquots of culture fluids. Insect larvae injected with the culture fluid from vEV-Tox34-infected cells were paralyzed within 2 minutes whereas the insect larvae injected with fluid from wild-type AcMNPV-infected cells showed no paralytic response over an extended time period (several days) . Paralyzed larvae were visually immobile, they lacked the righting response (the ability to turn themselves upright after turned onto their dorsal sides) and they failed to spin silk to line their burrows (a stereotypic behavior of wax moth larvae) . Control larvae exhibited movement, the righting response and silk-spinning behavior. These results indicated that a neuroparalytic toxin was produced in the VEV-Tox34-infected cells, but not in cells infected with wild-type AcMNPV, via expression of the Tox34 cDNA coding sequence and that this toxin was secreted into the extracellular medium. The Tox34 gene product effects contractile muscle paralysis in the challenged insect larvae.
To test the ability of a baculovirus carrying the Tox34 gene to control insect larval feeding behavior during infection, insects were infected with vEV-Tox34 by injecting purified budded virus into the hemolymph of test larvae. T. ni larvae in about early fourth instar were injected with TC-100 medium (mock-infected) or medium containing budded virus particles from cell cultures infected with either wild- type AcMNPV or vEV-Tox34 (4 x 105 plaque-forming units of virus per larva) . Control larvae included those larvae injected with culture medium or with wild-type AcMNPV. Insects injected with VEV-Tox34 were paralyzed (immobilized and lacked righting response) by 36 hr after injection.
In the above-described virus construction, the Tox34 coding sequence is expressed under the regulatory control of the very late
LSXIV baculovirus promoter [see also U.S. Patent No. 5,244,805 (Miller) issued September 19, 1993] which is not expressed until about 18 hrs pi in cells infected at a high multiplicity of infection (moi; i.e. 10 viruses/cell) or until 24-30 hrs pi in cells infected at a moi of 1. Thus, it was not unexpected that the paralytic effects of baculovirus- mediated Tox34 expression were not observed until about 36 hrs pi.
Transplacement plasmid phc-ETL-Tox34 was constructed with the Tox34 coding sequence expressed under the regulatory control of the ΞTL promoter of AcMNPV [described in Crawford et al . (1988) J. Virol . £2:2773-2778, incorporated by reference herein] . The Tox34-containing EcoRI fragment was inserted into the EcoRI site of phc-dET, which was derived from phcwt [Rankin et al . (1988) supra] by replacing the polyhedrin promoter between the EcoRV site and the Bglll site with the
ETL promoter sequences extending from -6 (relative to the ETL translational initiation ATG at +l,+2,+3) to approximately 300 bp upstream of the ETL coding sequences . The transplacement plasmid and wild-type AcMNPV were cotransfected and appropriate nonoccluded recombinants were isolated and characterized.
Table 1 . Toxicity and a Partial List of Host Preferences for Species of Mites in the Genus Pyemotes
TOXICITY INSECTS HUMANS HOSTS ventricosus group anobii extreme (?) Curculionidae Scolytidae Buprestidae Anobiidae beckeri extreme (?) Lyctidae Scolytidae emarcfinatus mild mild Cecidomyiidae schwerdtfecreri extreme mild Anobiidae Buprestidae tritici extreme extreme Cucuj idae Curculionidae Kalotermitidae Vespidae tuberculatus (?) (?) Anobiidae ventricosus extreme extreme Apoidea Chalcidoidea z oelferi extreme extreme Cecidomyiidae
scolvti qroup dimorphus mild none Scolytidae drγas mild none Scolytidae αicranticus mild none Scolytidae parviscolyti mild none Scolytidae scolyti mild none Scolytidae
Modified from Cross and Moser (1975) Ann. Entomol. Soc. Am. 68:723-732 Table 2. Response of neonate Trichoplusia ni to infection by wt AcMNPV or recombinant baculoviruses expressing toxins with alternate signal sequences.
Dose response1
95% fiducial limits virus LC50 (PIBs/ml) upper lower wt AcMNPV 2.2 x 104 2.6 x 104 1.8 x 104 2.25 lvSp-tox34 2.0 x 104 2.3 x 104 1.6 x 104 2.13 vSp-tox21A 3.5 x 104 4.1 x 104 3.0 x 104 2.53 vSp-BSigtox34 1.6 x 104 2.8 x 104 0.8 x 104 2.03 vSp-tox21A/tox34 5.3 x 104 6.5 x 104 4.3 x 104 1.95 vSp-DCtox34 2.6 x 104 3.1 x 104 2.2 x 104 2.34
Time response2 virus ET50 ± s.e. (h) slope wt AcMNPV 94.6 ± 1.6 14.8 vSp-tox34 51.1 ± 0.9 13.2 vSp-tox21A 62.1 + 0.9 18.8 vSp-BSigtox34 70.0 + 2.6 6.4 vSp-tox21A/tox34 60.8 ± 2.0 8.1 vSp-DCtox34 49.9 + 1.0 12.5
1 determined by probit analysis
2 determined by ViStat 2.1 analysis at LC95 dose
Table 3. Response of neonate Spodoptera frugiperda larvae to oral infection by wt AcMNPV and recombinants expressing tox34 under control of alternate promoters.
Dose response1
95% fiducial limits virus LC50 (PIBs/ml) upper lower wt AcMNPV 1.3 x 10s 1.7 x 106 1.0 x 106 1.43 vHSP70tox34 1.6 x 106 1.8 x 106 1.0 x 10s 1.49 vDA26tox34 1.1 x 106 1.4 x 106 0.8 x 106 1.42 vp6.9tox34 0.6 x 106 0.9 x 106 0.3 x 106 1.23 vSp-tox34 0.8 x 106 1.0 x 106 0.5 x 106 1.3L
Time response2 virus ET50 ± s.e. (h) slope wt AcMNPV 101.3 ± 2.5 9.9 vHSP70tox34 41.8 ± 2.5 8.2 vDA26tox34 61.8 ± 2.0 7.2 vp6.9tox34 44.7 ± 1.7 7.4 vSp-tox34 55.4 + 2.0 7.0
1 determined by probit analysis
2 determined by ViStat 2.1 analysis at LC95 dose
Table 4. Response of neonate Trichoplusia ni larvae to oral infection by wt AcMNPV and recombinants expressing tox34 under control of alternate promoters
Dose response1
95% fiducial limits virus LC50 (PIBs/ml) upper lower wt AcMNPV 5.4 x 103 7.2 x 103 3.5 x 103 1.80 vHSP70tox34 4.5 x 103 9.5 x 103 1.0 x 103 1.90 vDA26tox34 7.0 x 103 8.9 x 103 5.3 x 103 2.10 vp6.9tox34 2.0 x 103 3.5 x 103 0.6 x 103 1.53 vSp-tox34 1.6 x 103 2.8 x 103 0.5 x 103 1.58
Time response2 virus ET50 ± s.e. (h) slope wt AcMNPV 99.0 ± 2.0 13.9 vHSP70tox34 53.8 ± 1.0 14.3 vDA26tox34 71.2 + 1.1 15.9 vp6.9tox34 41.7 ± 1.4 12.3 vSp-tox34 58.5 + 1.4 12.7
1 determined by probit analysis
2 determined by ViStat analysis at LC95 dose
Table 5. Response of neonate S. frugiperda larvae to oral infection by wt AcMNPV or recombinant virus expressing tox34 with or without a reverse TAAG sequence in the tox34 signal sequence.
Dose response1
95% fiducial limits virus LC50 (PIBs/ml) upper lower wt AcMNPV 3.6 x 10s 4.7 x 105 2.5 x 105 1.45 vp6.9tox34 1.5 x 105 2.2 x 105 0.9 x 105 1.30 vp6.9tox34m 3.6 x 105 4.7 x 105 2.6 x 105 1.53 vSp-tox34 2.8 x 105 7.1 x 105 1.5 x 105 1.34 vSp-tox34m 2.5 x 105 3.4 x 105 1.7 x 105 1.45
Time response virus ETC + s .e . (h) slope wt AcMNPV 103.0 ± 2.1 11.5 vp6.9tox34 43.9 ± 1.6 8.9 vp6.9tox34m 48.4 ± 1.8 6.9 vSp-tox34 54.9 ± 1.5 8.5 vSp-tox34m 47.9 + 1.1 11.3
1 determined by probit analysis
2 determined by ViStat 2.1 analysis at LC95 dose
Table 6. Response of neonate T. ni larvae to oral infection by wt AcMNPV or recombinant virus expressing tox34 with or without a reverse TAAG sequence in the tox34 signal sequence.
Dose response1
95% fiducial limits virus LC50 (PIBs/ml) upper lower wt AcMNPV 9.2 x 103 4.6 x 104 1.4 x 104 1.37 vp6.9tox34 3.6 x 103 6.0 x 103 1.1 x 103 1.-54 vp6.9tox34m 1.1 x 104 1.5 x 104 7.7 x 103 1.40 vSp-tox34 6.5 x 103 9.0 x 103 4.1 x 103 2.01 vSp-tox34m 6.3 x 10 8.1 x 103 4.4 x 103 2.46
Time response2 virus ETK + s . e , (h) slope wt AcMNPV 100.5 ± 2.3 11.5 vp6.9tox34 41.5 ± 1.6 8.2 vp6.9tox34m 46.7 ± 1.5 8.8 vSp-tox34 59.2 ± 1.5 12.7 vSp-tox34m 55.9 + 1.2 14.8
1 determined by probit analysis
2 determined by ViStat 2.1 analysis at LC95 dose
Table 7. Length, percent similarity and identity of known EGT amino acid sequences to HzSNPV EGT
Virus Length Similarity Identity
MbNPV 528 70.0 49.8
LdNPV 488 65.9 49.6
S1NPV 515 70.8 49.1
AcNPV 506 67.6 46.2
BmNPV 507 67.6 46.2
CfNPV 491 61.4 42.4
CfDEF 493 63.9 45.2
OpNPV* 293 62.2 44.1
LoGV 460 65.1 43.4
* Partial sequence of 293 amino acids
Table 8. Dose-mortality response of neonate Heliocoverpa zea larvae infected per os with wild-type HzSNPV and various recombinants . Bioassay #1.
Virus LC50 95% Fiducial Limit Hetero- (PIB/ml) lower upper Slope geneity
HzSNPV Elkar 1. .1 x 103 0, .6 x 102 2. .7 X 103 1. .2 + 0. .3 0. .6
HzSNPV (BSU361-) 1. .7 x 103 1, .1 x 103 2. .5 X 103 2. .1 + 0, .4 1. .0
HzEGTdel 2. .2 x 103 0. .6 x 103 4. .4 X 103 1. .6 + 0. .3 1, ,0
HzEGTp6.9tox34 0. .8 x 103 0. .2 x 103 1. .6 X 103 1. .1 + 0. .2 0. .6
HzEGThsptox34 1. .2 x 103 0. .4 x 103 2. .1 X 103 1. .2 + 0. .2 0, .9
HzEGTDA26tox34 0. .7 x 103 0 .9 x 103 1. .3 X 103 1, .1 + 0. .3 0. .3
Table 9. Dose-mortality response of neonate Heliocoverpa zea larvae infected per os with wild-type HzSNPV and various recombinants . Bioassay #2.
Virus LC50 95% Fiducial Limit Hetero-
(PIB/ml) lower upper Slope geneity
HzSNPV Elkar 1. .4 x 103 0. .9 x 103 1, .9 X 103 2, .2 ± 0, .5 0.04
HzSNPV (BSU361-) 1. .3 x 103 0, .6 x 103 2, .0 X 103 1, .3 ± 0, .4 0.9
HzEGTdel 1. .7 x 103 0. .8 x 103 2, .7 X 103 1, .2 ± 0, .2 0.6
HzEGTp6.9tox34 1. .6 x 103 1. .1 x 103 2, .5 X 103 1, .7 ± 0, .3 0.6
HzEGThsptox34 2. .3 x 103 1. .2 x 103 5, .0 X 103 1, .9 ± 0, .3 1.2
HzEGTDA26tOx34 2. .1 x 103 1. .1 x 103 4, .9 X 103 1, .9 ± 0. .3 1.1
Table 10. Time-mortality response of neonate Heliocoverpa zea larvae infected per os with wild-type HzSNPV and various recombinant viruses. Bioassay #1.
LC50 LC95 virus ET50 ± SE Slope ± SE ET50 ± SE Slope ± SE
HzSNPV Elkar 64.2 ± 2.8 8.9 ± 1.9 63.4 ± 1.8 12.0 ± 2.0 HzSNPV (BSU361-) 61.1 ± 2.7 10.3 + 2.4 64.0 ± 1.3 16.0 +2.8 HzEGTdel 72.4 ± 5.2 7.1 ± 1.9 62.4 ± 1.6 13.2 ±2.4 HzEGTp6.9tox34 43.9 ± 1.2 19.1 ± 5.1 40.5 ± 1.0 13.3 ± 2.2 HzEGThsptox34 49.5 ± 1.2 19.2 ± 4.9 46.4 ± 0.7 23.5 ±4.6 HzEGTDA26tox34 39.3 ± 1.5 11.5 ± 2.5 36.8 + 0.7 18.2 ± 3.2
Table 11. Time-mortality response of neonate Heliocoverpa zea larvae infected per os with wild-type HzSNPV and various recombinant viruses. Bioassay #2.
LC50 LC95 virus ET50 + SE Slope ± SE ET50 ± SE Slope ± SE
HzSNPV Elkar 64.3 ± 2.8 8.9 ± 1.7 65.4 ± 2.2 12.0 ± 2.0 HzSNPV (BSU361-) 62.2 ± 2.3 11.6 ± 2.5 58.3 ± 1.9 10.0 ± 1.6 HzEGTdel 67.3 ± 3.8 9.6 ± 2.6 67.3 ± 2.3 9.5 ± 1.5 HzEGTp6.9tox34 41.6 ± 1.2 14.5 ± 3.0 38.0 ± 0.7 18.3 ± 3.1 HzEGThsptθx34 44.0 + 0.9 20.0 ± 3.9 44.1 ± 0.7 20.6 ± 3.6 HzEGTDA 6tox34 39.1 ± 1.5 12.0 + 2.8 35.4 + 0.6 19.0 + 3.9 SEQUENCE LISTING
(1) GENERAL INFORMATION:
(i) APPLICANT: University of Georgia Research Foundation, Inc. American Cyanamid Company Miller, Lois K. Lu, Albert Dierks, Peter Black, Bruce
(ii) TITLE OF INVENTION: Biological Insect Control Agents
Expressing Insect-specific Toxin Genes, Methods and Compositions
(iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 24
(iv) CORRESPONDENCE ADDRESS:
(A) ADDRESSEE: Greenlee, Winner and Sullivan, P.C.
(B) STREET: 5370 Manhattan Circle, Suite 201
(C) CITY: Boulder
(D) STATE: Colorado
(E) COUNTRY: US
(F) ZIP: 80303
(v) COMPUTER READABLE FORM:
(A) MEDIUM TYPE: Floppy disk
(B) COMPUTER: IBM PC compatible
(C) OPERATING SYSTEM: PC-DOS/MS-DOS
(D) SOFTWARE: Patentin Release #1.0, Version #1.30
(vi) CURRENT APPLICATION DATA:
(A) APPLICATION NUMBER: WO
(B) FILING DATE: 01-OCT-1997
(C) CLASSIFICATION:
(vii) PRIOR APPLICATION DATA:
(A) APPLICATION NUMBER: US 08/720,606
(B) FILING DATE: 01-OCT-1996
(viii) ATTORNEY/AGENT INFORMATION:
(A) NAME: Ferber, Donna M.
(B) REGISTRATION NUMBER: 33,878
(C) REFERENCE/DOCKET NUMBER: 28-96A WO
(ix) TELECOMMUNICATION INFORMATION:
(A) TELEPHONE: (303) 499-8080
(B) TELEFAX: (303) 499-8089
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO : 1 :
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 924 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: double
(D) TOPOLOGY: not relevant
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA to mRNA (iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: CDS
(B) LOCATION: 12..887 (ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: mat_peptide
(B) LOCATION: 129..884
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO : 1 :
CTTATTAATT A ATG AAA ATT TGT ACA TTT TTT ATT CCT TTA TTC AAA ATG 50 Met Lys He Cys Thr Phe Phe He Pro Leu Phe Lys Met -39 -35 -30
AAC TTG TTT TTT TTA TTT ATT ATT CCA ACA ATT TTA GCA GTT AAA CCT 98 Asn Leu Phe Phe Leu Phe He He Pro Thr He Leu Ala Val Lys Pro -25 -20 -15
TTT AGG TCT TTT AAT AAT ATT TCC TTA ATT GAT AAT GGC AAT GTC GAA 146 Phe Arg Ser Phe Asn Asn He Ser Leu He Asp Asn Gly Asn Val Glu -10 -5 1 5
TCT GTA AGA GCA GTA GTT ATT GAT TAT TGT GAT ATT AGA CAT CCA AAT 194 Ser Val Arg Ala Val Val He Asp Tyr Cys Asp He Arg His Pro Asn 10 15 20
AAT TTA TGT AAA AAA CAT TTT GAA ATC GAT TCA TAT TGG AAT GAT GAT 242 Asn Leu Cys Lys Lys His Phe Glu He Asp Ser Tyr Trp Asn Asp Asp 25 30 35
ACG GAT TGT TTT ACA AAT ATT GGA TGC AAA GTA TAT GGA GGA TTT GAT 290 Thr Asp Cys Phe Thr Asn He Gly Cys Lys Val Tyr Gly Gly Phe Asp 40 45 50
ATT ATT GGT GGT CAT ACC CCT AAA GTT GGA ACT GTA TGT AGA CTT AAA 338 He He Gly Gly His Thr Pro Lys Val Gly Thr Val Cys Arg Leu Lys 55 60 65 70
AAA GGA GAA AAT AAA TTT GGA TAT TGT AAT TCA AAG GGA AAT TGC GTT 386 Lys Gly Glu Asn Lys Phe Gly Tyr Cys Asn Ser Lys Gly Asn Cys Val 75 80 85
GAA AGA GAT TTT AAA GAA AGT TTT GGA ATA TCT ATA AAA ATA AAA GGA 434 Glu Arg Asp Phe Lys Glu Ser Phe Gly He Ser He Lys He Lys Gly 90 95 100
ATT TCT AAT AAA GGA GAT GAT GAA CCA GCA TGT CCA CAA TAT AAA AAT 482 He Ser Asn Lys Gly Asp Asp Glu Pro Ala Cys Pro Gin Tyr Lys Asn 105 110 115
ACT TGG ATT AAT TAT GGG AAA TGT AAT GAA CCT TAT TAT TGT GGA ACA 530 Thr Trp He Asn Tyr Gly Lys Cys Asn Glu Pro Tyr Tyr Cys Gly Thr 120 125 130
AAT CAT GGA TTA TTT TAT GCA AAC AAA AGA AAA CTC GAT TAC TTT CCC 578 Asn His Gly Leu Phe Tyr Ala Asn Lys Arg Lys Leu Asp Tyr Phe Pro 135 140 145 150
ACA GAC GGT GAA AAA TGT AAT TCA AAT AAT ATA CCA TAT GCT GTT TGT 626 Thr Asp Gly Glu Lys Cys Asn Ser Asn Asn He Pro Tyr Ala Val Cys 155 160 165
TAT TTA GGA AGA TGT CAT ACA ACA GGT GGT TTT TTT AGT GAA TTT GGA 674 Tyr Leu Gly Arg Cys His Thr Thr Gly Gly Phe Phe Ser Glu Phe Gly 170 175 180
ACT ATT GTT AAA AAT GTC GAA ATC GTA ACT TTA TCA GAT GGA AAG AAC 722 Thr He Val Lys Asn Val Glu He Val Thr Leu Ser Asp Gly Lys Asn 185 190 195 AGT TCT AGA AGA GGA AAA CAT AAA AAT TTA CCT ACT TCT AAA GTA TTT 770 Ser Ser Arg Arg Gly Lys His Lys Asn Leu Pro Thr Ser Lys Val Phe 200 205 210
GAT AGT TAT AGT ATA TAT GAT ATT GAT CCT AAA AAT TGG AAA ATT GAA 818 Asp Ser Tyr Ser He Tyr Asp He Asp Pro Lys Asn Trp Lys He Glu 215 220 225 230
GAT GAT GAT AAA GAT GTT ACT GTT CAT GAA AAT ACA TTA GAT CCA AAA 866 Asp Asp Asp Lys Asp Val Thr Val His Glu Asn Thr Leu Asp Pro Lys 235 240 245
AGT GAT TCA AGA CTG TGT TAA ATTTTTAAAA ATTTGATTTT TTTAAATAAA 917
Ser Asp Ser Arg Leu Cys * 250
TGTCAAT 924
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO : 2 :
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 292 amino acids
(B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 2:
Met Lys He Cys Thr Phe Phe He Pro Leu Phe Lys Met Asn Leu Phe -39 -35 -30 -25
Phe Leu Phe He He Pro Thr He Leu Ala Val Lys Pro Phe Arg Ser -20 -15 -10
Phe Asn Asn He Ser Leu He Asp Asn Gly Asn Val Glu Ser Val Arg -5 1 5
Ala Val Val He Asp Tyr Cys Asp He Arg His Pro Asn Asn Leu Cys 10 15 20 25
Lys Lys His Phe Glu He Asp Ser Tyr Trp Asn Asp Asp Thr Asp Cys 30 35 40
Phe Thr Asn He Gly Cys Lys Val Tyr Gly Gly Phe Asp He He Gly 45 50 55
Gly His Thr Pro Lys Val Gly Thr Val Cys Arg Leu Lys Lys Gly Glu 60 65 70
Asn Lys Phe Gly Tyr Cys Asn Ser Lys Gly Asn Cys Val Glu Arg Asp 75 80 85
Phe Lys Glu Ser Phe Gly He Ser He Lys He Lys Gly He Ser Asn 90 95 100 105
Lys Gly Asp Asp Glu Pro Ala Cys Pro Gin Tyr Lys Asn Thr Trp He 110 115 120
Asn Tyr Gly Lys Cys Asn Glu Pro Tyr Tyr Cys Gly Thr Asn His Gly 125 130 135
Leu Phe Tyr Ala Asn Lys Arg Lys Leu Asp Tyr Phe Pro Thr Asp Gly 140 145 150 Glu Lys Cys Asn Ser Asn Asn He Pro Tyr Ala Val Cys Tyr Leu Gly 155 160 165
Arg Cys His Thr Thr Gly Gly Phe Phe Ser Glu Phe Gly Thr He Val 170 175 180 185
Lys Asn Val Glu He Val Thr Leu Ser Asp Gly Lys Asn Ser Ser Arg 190 195 200
Arg Gly Lys His Lys Asn Leu Pro Thr Ser Lys Val Phe Asp Ser Tyr 205 210 215
Ser He Tyr Asp He Asp Pro Lys Asn Trp Lys He Glu Asp Asp Asp 220 225 230
Lys Asp Val Thr Val His Glu Asn Thr Leu Asp Pro Lys Ser Asp Ser 235 240 245
Arg Leu Cys * 250
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO : 3 :
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 1241 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: double
(D) TOPOLOGY: not relevant
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA to mRNA (iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: CDS
(B) LOCATION: 119..988
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 3:
GAATTCCAAC AACAGTGCCT TTGGGCGGCC GCACTGGTCT TAACTTTTTT CTCTTTTTTA 60
GCAGCGGCCA TGATAATTTA ATAATCTTAT TTACAAATTT TTTATTATTT TATTCAGA 118
ATG AAC TTG TAT TTT TTA TTT TTT ATT TCA ACT ATT TTA GCA GCT AAA 166 Met Asn Leu Tyr Phe Leu Phe Phe He Ser Thr He Leu Ala Ala Lys 1 5 10 15
CCT TTC AAT TCT TTT AAT AAA ACT TCA TTA ATT GAT GAA GGA GTT GAC 214 Pro Phe Asn Ser Phe Asn Lys Thr Ser Leu He Asp Glu Gly Val Asp 20 25 30
AAC GAT GAC GAT ATT GTC TCT AAA AGA GCA GTA GTT ATT GAT TAT TGT 262 Asn Asp Asp Asp He Val Ser Lys Arg Ala Val Val He Asp Tyr Cys 35 40 45
GAT ACT AGA CAT CCA AAT AAT TTA TGT AAA AAA TAT TTT GAA ATC GAT 310 Asp Thr Arg His Pro Asn Asn Leu Cys Lys Lys Tyr Phe Glu He Asp 50 55 60
TCA TAT TGG AAT GAT GAT ACG GAT TGT TTT ACA AAT ATT GGA TGC AAA 358 Ser Tyr Trp Asn Asp Asp Thr Asp Cys Phe Thr Asn He Gly Cys Lys 65 70 75 80 GTA TAT GGA GGA TTT GAT ATT ATT GGT GGT AAA GCT CCT AAA ATT GGA 406 Val Tyr Gly Gly Phe Asp He He Gly Gly Lys Ala Pro Lys He Gly 85 90 95
ACT GTA TGT AGA CTT AAA AAA GGA AAA AAT AAA TTT GGA TAT TGT AAT 454 Thr Val Cys Arg Leu Lys Lys Gly Lys Asn Lys Phe Gly Tyr Cys Asn 100 105 110
TCA AAA GGA AAT TGC GTT GAA AGA GAT TTT ATT GAA AGT TTT GGA GTA 502 Ser Lys Gly Asn Cys Val Glu Arg Asp Phe He Glu Ser Phe Gly Val 115 120 125
TCT ATA AAA ATA AAA GGA ATT TCT CAT AGA GGA GAT GAT GAA CCA GCA 550 Ser He Lys He Lys Gly He Ser His Arg Gly Asp Asp Glu Pro Ala 130 135 140
TGT CCA CTT TAT GAA AAT ACT TGG ATT AAT TAT GGA AAA TGT AAT GAA 598 Cys Pro Leu Tyr Glu Asn Thr Trp He Asn Tyr Gly Lys Cys Asn Glu 145 150 155 160
CCT TAT CAT TGT GGA ACA AAT TAT GGG TTA TTT TAT GCA AAC AAA AGA 646 Pro Tyr His Cys Gly Thr Asn Tyr Gly Leu Phe Tyr Ala Asn Lys Arg 165 170 175
AAA CTC AAT TAC TTT CCT GAT AAC GGT CAA AAA TGT AAT TCA AAA TAT 694 Lys Leu Asn Tyr Phe Pro Asp Asn Gly Gin Lys Cys Asn Ser Lys Tyr 180 185 190
GAA ATA TAC GGT GTA TGT TAT TTA GGA CGC TGT CAT GGA ACA GGA AAT 742 Glu He Tyr Gly Val Cys Tyr Leu Gly Arg Cys His Gly Thr Gly Asn 195 200 205
TTT TCA AAT GGT GAA GTT TTT AGT GAA TTT GGA ACT ATT TTT AAA GAT 790 Phe Ser Asn Gly Glu Val Phe Ser Glu Phe Gly Thr He Phe Lys Asp 210 215 220
GTC GAA ATT GTA ACT TTA TCA GAT GGA AAG AAC AGT TCT AAA AGA GGA 838 Val Glu He Val Thr Leu Ser Asp Gly Lys Asn Ser Ser Lys Arg Gly 225 230 235 240
AAA CAT AAA AAT TTA CAT GGT TCT AAA GTA TTT GAT AGT AAT GGT ATA 886 Lys His Lys Asn Leu His Gly Ser Lys Val Phe Asp Ser Asn Gly He 245 250 255
TAT GAT ATT GAT CCT AAA AAT TGG AAA ATT GAA GAT GAT GAT AAA GAT 934 Tyr Asp He Asp Pro Lys Asn Trp Lys He Glu Asp Asp Asp Lys Asp 260 265 270
ATT ACT GTT CAT GAA AAT GCT GGA GAT CCA AAA AGT GAT TCA AGA CGT 982 He Thr Val His Glu Asn Ala Gly Asp Pro Lys Ser Asp Ser Arg Arg 275 280 285
TGT TAA ATTTTTAAAT ATTTGATTTT TTTTAAATAA ATATAAATCT ATATATTTAA 1038 Cys * 290
TAATATAATT TCTTTTAATT TTTAAATTAG TAAAATTTCG ATAATTTTAC TTAATTTTTT 1098
AAATTTACTA AATTGACTAA TTTTATTAAG AAGTAACTTC TAAAAAATTT GATTTTTTTT 1158
AAAACAAATA ATTATAAATA TTTTTTAATT AAATAAATTT AATAATTACA AGATAAAAAA 1218
AAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAGGAA TTC 1241 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID Nθ:4:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 290 amino acids
(B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO : 4 :
Met Asn Leu Tyr Phe Leu Phe Phe He Ser Thr He Leu Ala Ala Lys 1 5 10 15
Pro Phe Asn Ser Phe Asn Lys Thr Ser Leu He Asp Glu Gly Val Asp 20 25 30
Asn Asp Asp Asp He Val Ser Lys Arg Ala Val Val He Asp Tyr Cys 35 40 45
Asp Thr Arg His Pro Asn Asn Leu Cys Lys Lys Tyr Phe Glu He Asp 50 55 60
Ser Tyr Trp Asn Asp Asp Thr Asp Cys Phe Thr Asn He Gly Cys Lys 65 70 75 80
Val Tyr Gly Gly Phe Asp He He Gly Gly Lys Ala Pro Lys He Gly 85 90 95
Thr Val Cys Arg Leu Lys Lys Gly Lys Asn Lys Phe Gly Tyr Cys Asn 100 105 110
Ser Lys Gly Asn Cys Val Glu Arg Asp Phe He Glu Ser Phe Gly Val 115 120 125
Ser He Lys He Lys Gly He Ser His Arg Gly Asp Asp Glu Pro Ala 130 135 140
Cys Pro Leu Tyr Glu Asn Thr Trp He Asn Tyr Gly Lys Cys Asn Glu 145 150 155 160
Pro Tyr His Cys Gly Thr Asn Tyr Gly Leu Phe Tyr Ala Asn Lys Arg 165 170 175
Lys Leu Asn Tyr Phe Pro Asp Asn Gly Gin Lys Cys Asn Ser Lys Tyr 180 185 190
Glu He Tyr Gly Val Cys Tyr Leu Gly Arg Cys His Gly Thr Gly Asn 195 200 205
Phe Ser Asn Gly Glu Val Phe Ser Glu Phe Gly Thr He Phe Lys Asp 210 215 220
Val Glu He Val Thr Leu Ser Asp Gly Lys Asn Ser Ser Lys Arg Gly 225 230 235 240
Lys His Lys Asn Leu His Gly Ser Lys Val Phe Asp Ser Asn Gly He 245 250 255
Tyr Asp He Asp Pro Lys Asn Trp Lys He Glu Asp Asp Asp Lys Asp 260 265 270
He Thr Val His Glu Asn Ala Gly Asp Pro Lys Ser Asp Ser Arg Arg 275 280 285
Cys * 290 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO : 5 :
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 24 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Oligonucleotide primer"
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 5: ATGAACTTGT ATTTTTTATT TTTT 24
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 6:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 27 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Oligonucleotide primer"
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 6: ATCAATTAAT GAAGTTTTAT TAAAAGA 27
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO : 7 :
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 27 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Oligonucleotide primer"
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO : 7 : TCTTTTAATA ATATTTCCTT AATTGAT 27
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO : 8 :
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 21 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Oligonculeotide primer"
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO : 8 : GGGTCGACAC AGCTGCAGCT C 21
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO : 9 :
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 23 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Oligonucleotide primer"
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO : 9 : GCCATTATCA ATCAAGGAAA TAT 23
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 10:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 81 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: double
(D) TOPOLOGY: not relevant
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Coding sequence of Sarcotoxin IA signal sequence and start of toxin protein"
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: CDS
(B) LOCATION: 1..81
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: sig_peptide
(B) LOCATION: 1..69
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 10:
ATG AAC TTC CAA AAC ATA TTC ATA TTC GTG GCG TTA ATA TTG GCG GTG 48 Met Asn Phe Gin Asn He Phe He Phe Val Ala Leu He Leu Ala Val 1 5 10 15
TTC GCG GGA CAA TCT CAG GCG GGG GAT AAT GGC 81
Phe Ala Gly Gin Ser Gin Ala Gly Asp Asn Gly 20 25 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 11:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 27 amino acids
(B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 11:
Met Asn Phe Gin Asn He Phe He Phe Val Ala Leu He Leu Ala Val 1 5 10 15
Phe Ala Gly Gin Ser Gin Ala Gly Asp Asn Gly 20 25
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 12:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 57 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: double
(D) TOPOLOGY: not relevant
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Coding sequence for signal sequence and beginning of Drosophila melanogaster cuticle protein"
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: CDS
(B) LOCATION: 1..57
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: sig_peptide
(B) LOCATION: 1..48
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 12:
ATG TTC AAG TTT GTC ATG ATC TGC GCA GTT TTG GGC CTG GCG GTG GCC 48 Met Phe Lys Phe Val Met He Cys Ala Val Leu Gly Leu Ala Val Ala 1 5 10 15
GAT AAT GGC 57
Asp Asn Gly
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 13:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 19 amino acids
(B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 13:
Met Phe Lys Phe Val Met He Cys Ala Val Leu Gly Leu Ala Val Ala 1 5 10 15
Asp Asn Gly (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO : 14 :
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 126 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: double
(D) TOPOLOGY: not relevant
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Coding sequence for modified tox34 signal sequence and start of mature Tox34 protein"
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: CDS
(B) LOCATION: 1..126
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: sig_peptide
(B) LOCATION: 1..112
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO : 14 :
ATG AAA ATT TGT ACA TTT TTT ATT CTT TTA TTC AAA ATG AAC TTG TTT 48 Met Lys He Cys Thr Phe Phe He Leu Leu Phe Lys Met Asn Leu Phe 1 5 10 15
TTT TTA TTT ATT ATT CCA ACA ATT TTA GCA GTT AAA CCT TTT AGG TCT 96 Phe Leu Phe He He Pro Thr He Leu Ala Val Lys Pro Phe Arg Ser 20 25 30
TTT AAT AAT ATT TCC TTG ATT GAT AAT GGC 126
Phe Asn Asn He Ser Leu He Asp Asn Gly 35 40
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 15:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 42 amino acids
(B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID Nθ:15:
Met Lys He Cys Thr Phe Phe He Leu Leu Phe Lys Met Asn Leu Phe 1 5 10 15
Phe Leu Phe He He Pro Thr He Leu Ala Val Lys Pro Phe Arg Ser 20 25 30
Phe Asn Asn He Ser Leu He Asp Asn Gly 35 40
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 16:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 28 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear ( ii) MOLECULE TYPE : other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION : /desc = "Oligonucleotide . "
( iii) HYPOTHETICAL : NO
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: misc_feature
(B) LOCATION: 1..28
(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note= "At position 10, N is inosine; at position 21, N is A, G, T or C."
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 16: GCGGATCCAN YGTGSWGTWY NTKGGMGG 28
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID Nθ:17:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 7 amino acids
(B) TYPE: amino acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: peptide (iii) HYPOTHETICAL: YES
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 17:
Ser Val Gin Tyr Leu Gly Gly 1 5
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 18:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 25 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Oligonucleotide."
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: misc_feature
(B) LOCATION: 1..24
(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /note= "At position 23, N is A, T, G or C . "
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 18:
GCGAATTCGG MABVMHCACC AKNGG 25
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 19:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 6 amino acids (B) TYPE: amino acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: peptide (iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 19:
Pro Met Val Cys Leu Pro 1 5
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 20:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 30 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Oligonucleotide."
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 20: TCGACCTCAG GGCAGCTTAA GGCCTGCAGG 30
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 21:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 30 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: single
(D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: other nucleic acid
(A) DESCRIPTION: /desc = "Oligonucleotide."
(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 21: TCGACCTGCA GGCCTTAAGC TGCCCTGAGG 30
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:22:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 395 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: double
(D) TOPOLOGY: not relevant
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:22:
CGATAACAAC TTTAAAGTAA CCATATTATG GAACACTTGA CCGCACACCC AAATAGAATG 60
ACAAAGAATG TTTTCATCGT TTCGTCGCCC ACACAATTCA AACATAACGT TATCTTTAAA 120
GATAACAAAT GATGACATAT ATTAAATTAT GGTGCAATAT ACATGACACA AACAACTTAC 180
GTCATCGTAA CCTTGAATTA AAATGTAAAA ACAATTTGTG ATATCGTTAA TTCTAGGAAG 240
TTGGGCACAA ACAACTTACG TCATCGTAAC CTTAGGTCAA ATCGTTAATT CTAGGAAGTT 300
GTGCACAAAC AACTTACGTC ATACATGTTA TTAATCATTT GCGGTGCAAT CGTCATCGGA 360
TCAAACGATT TCGGTTAAAT TTCGACACTG GTGTG 395 (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 3:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 2025 base pairs
(B) TYPE: nucleic acid
(C) STRANDEDNESS: double
(D) TOPOLOGY: not relevant
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO
(ix) FEATURE:
(A) NAME/KEY: CDS
(B) LOCATION: 320..1867
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:23:
TCGACAGAGT TATATTATTT ATTAATGTGT TGCTGTTGTT GCGTATGACA TCATAGGTAT 60
TAGTACTGTC ATTGCTAAAT ATAGACATGA AATAATTATC TTCGTTGAGG TTATCACGAA 120
CACTAGTAGT CATCGTGACG ATAGATATCT GTAATACACA CATCAAAGTA AACATGTTTA 180
CTTAAACAGT AACTGAATAA TAATTTCAAC ATACGCACGC CACTATAAGA TGCAGCATCC 240
CGTCCGTTGG TCATCTTTCG ATAAACGCTC TGACCCATAA ACGGACGTGC GCTAATTTTT 300
TTTTATTGCT AAATTCAAA ATG TAC AAA CAA ATA ATA ACT ATG TTA TTG TTG 352
Met Tyr Lys Gin He He Thr Met Leu Leu Leu 1 5 10
GTG TTG TTT CTG TCG GTT CTG GAT GGA GCG CGT ATC CTG TGC GTT TTT 400 Val Leu Phe Leu Ser Val Leu Asp Gly Ala Arg He Leu Cys Val Phe 15 20 25
CCT GTT CCT TCG TAC AGT CAT CAT GCA GTG TTC GAA GCT TAC ACC AAT 448 Pro Val Pro Ser Tyr Ser His His Ala Val Phe Glu Ala Tyr Thr Asn 30 35 40
GCT CTA GCG TCG CGT GGC CAT ACA ATA GTC AGA ATT ACA CCG TTT CCC 496 Ala Leu Ala Ser Arg Gly His Thr He Val Arg He Thr Pro Phe Pro 45 50 55 ACT AAG AAA AAC GAT TCA TCC AAC GTG ACA GAT GTC GAC GTT AGC TTG 544
Thr Lys Lys Asn Asp Ser Ser Asn Val Thr Asp Val Asp Val Ser Leu
60 65 70 75
TCG AAA GAT TAT TTT AAA AGT CTT GTG GAC CGA TCT AGA CTG TTC AAG 592
Ser Lys Asp Tyr Phe Lys Ser Leu Val Asp Arg Ser Arg Leu Phe Lys
80 85 90
AAA CGA GGC GTT ATT TCG GAA ACG TCC AGC GTG ACC GCT CGC AAT TAC 640
Lys Arg Gly Val He Ser Glu Thr Ser Ser Val Thr Ala Arg Asn Tyr
95 100 105
ATC AGT CTA GTA CAC ATG TTG ATT GAT CAA TTC TCT GTG GAG AGT GTA 688
He Ser Leu Val His Met Leu He Asp Gin Phe Ser Val Glu Ser Val
110 115 120
CGA CAA TTG ATC GAA TCC AAC AAT GTT TTC GAT TTG TTG GTG ACC GAA 736
Arg Gin Leu He Glu Ser Asn Asn Val Phe Asp Leu Leu Val Thr Glu
125 130 135
GCC TTT CTA GAT TAT CCT CTG GTG TTT TCG CAT TTG TTT GGC GAT GTG 784
Ala Phe Leu Asp Tyr Pro Leu Val Phe Ser His Leu Phe Gly Asp Val
140 145 150 155
CCT GTC ATA CAA ATT TCG TCG GGT CAC GCT TTG GCC GAA AAT TTT GAG 832
Pro Val He Gin He Ser Ser Gly His Ala Leu Ala Glu Asn Phe Glu
160 165 170
ACA ATG GGA GCC GTG AGC CGA CAT CCC ATT TAC TAT CCA AAT TTG TGG 880
Thr Met Gly Ala Val Ser Arg His Pro He Tyr Tyr Pro Asn Leu Trp
175 180 185
CGC AAC AAA TTT CAA AAT TTA AAC GTT TGG GAG ATA ATA ACG GAA ATC 928
Arg Asn Lys Phe Gin Asn Leu Asn Val Trp Glu He He Thr Glu He
190 195 200
TAT ACA GAA CTG GTG CTG TAC TTG GAA TTT GCT CGT TTA GCC GAC GAA 976
Tyr Thr Glu Leu Val Leu Tyr Leu Glu Phe Ala Arg Leu Ala Asp Glu
205 210 215
CAA ACT AAA ATG CTT CGC CAT CAA TTC GGA CCA AAC ACG CCC AGC GTG 1024
Gin Thr Lys Met Leu Arg His Gin Phe Gly Pro Asn Thr Pro Ser Val
220 225 230 235
GAA GAA CTG CGA CAA CGC GTT CAA TTA TTG TTT GTG AAT ACG CAT CCG 1072
Glu Glu Leu Arg Gin Arg Val Gin Leu Leu Phe Val Asn Thr His Pro
240 245 250
CTG TTT GAT AAT AAC AGA CCA GTA CCG CCG AGT GTA CAA TAT TTG GGA 1120
Leu Phe Asp Asn Asn Arg Pro Val Pro Pro Ser Val Gin Tyr Leu Gly
255 260 265
AGT CTA CAT CTT GAT CGA AAC AAT GAT GTC GAC GAA CAG CAA ACG ATG 1168
Ser Leu His Leu Asp Arg Asn Asn Asp Val Asp Glu Gin Gin Thr Met
270 275 280
GAC TAT AAT TTG ATG CAA TTT TTA AAT AAT TCT ACA AAC GGT GTG GTG 1216
Asp Tyr Asn Leu Met Gin Phe Leu Asn Asn Ser Thr Asn Gly Val Val
285 290 295
TAC GTG AGC TTC GGT ACG TCT ATA CGA GTT TCA GAC ATG GAC GAC GAA 1264
Tyr Val Ser Phe Gly Thr Ser He Arg Val Ser Asp Met Asp Asp Glu
300 305 310 315
TTT CTG TTT GAA TTT ATA ACA GCT TTC AAG CAA TTA CCC TAT AAT ATA 1312
Phe Leu Phe Glu Phe He Thr Ala Phe Lys Gin Leu Pro Tyr Asn He
320 325 330 TTG TGG AAG ACC GAT GGA ATG CCC ATG GAA CAC GTA CTG CCT AAA AAT 1360 Leu Trp Lys Thr Asp Gly Met Pro Met Glu His Val Leu Pro Lys Asn 335 340 345
GTG TTG ACA CAA ACT TGG CTG CCG CAA CAC CAT GTA TTG AAA CAC AGC 1408 Val Leu Thr Gin Thr Trp Leu Pro Gin His His Val Leu Lys His Ser 350 355 360
AAT GTA GTT GCT TTT GTT ACT CAA GGC GGA ATG CAG TCA ACG GAC GAA 1456 Asn Val Val Ala Phe Val Thr Gin Gly Gly Met Gin Ser Thr Asp Glu 365 370 375
GCC ATC GAC GCT TGT GTA CCA CTA ATC GGA ATC CCG TTT ATG GGC GAC 1504 Ala He Asp Ala Cys Val Pro Leu He Gly He Pro Phe Met Gly Asp 380 385 390 395
CAA GCA TAC AAT ACC AAT AAA TAC GAA GAA CTC GGA ATC GGA CGC AAC 1552 Gin Ala Tyr Asn Thr Asn Lys Tyr Glu Glu Leu Gly He Gly Arg Asn 400 405 410
CTC GAT CCC GTA ACG CTC ACA AGT CAT ATT TTG GTG TCT GCC GTT TTA 1600 Leu Asp Pro Val Thr Leu Thr Ser His He Leu Val Ser Ala Val Leu 415 420 425
GAT GTG ACC GTC AAC AAC AAG AGT CGC TAC ACA GAT AAT ATT AAA GCA 1648 Asp Val Thr Val Asn Asn Lys Ser Arg Tyr Thr Asp Asn He Lys Ala 430 435 440
TTG AAT CGT TCC ACT AAT TAT CGA ACA CGG AAA CCT ATG GAA AAG GCC 1696 Leu Asn Arg Ser Thr Asn Tyr Arg Thr Arg Lys Pro Met Glu Lys Ala 445 450 455
ATC TGG TAC ACA GAA CAT GTA ATT GAT AAT GGT AAA AAT CCC ATT TTA 1744 He Trp Tyr Thr Glu His Val He Asp Asn Gly Lys Asn Pro He Leu 460 465 470 475
AAA ACG AAG GCC GCC AAC GTA TCG TAT AGC AAA TAT TAT ATG AGT GAT 1792 Lys Thr Lys Ala Ala Asn Val Ser Tyr Ser Lys Tyr Tyr Met Ser Asp 480 485 490
ATC ATC GTT CCT GTT ATA ACG TTT TTG GTA ATG ACT CAT TTG GGT CAG 1840 He He Val Pro Val He Thr Phe Leu Val Met Thr His Leu Gly Gin 495 500 505
GCT ATT CGG CGG TTG GTT GTT ATT TAA TACTGTATGA CAATGTACAC 1887
Ala He Arg Arg Leu Val Val He * 510 515
ATGTGTTAAT AAAAAAGGCA TTACTAATAT TTAGATTGTT TCAAATTATT TACGCATGAC 1947
TACCCGTCTC CTATTGCGCA GCTACGCTAG CTTTAAATAC AGCCGATGGC GTAGTAAAGT 2007
TCATTTAAAT ATCTAAAT 2025
(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 24:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 516 amino acids
(B) TYPE: amino acid (D) TOPOLOGY: linear
(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein
(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 24: Met Tyr Lys Gin He He Thr Met Leu Leu Leu Val Leu Phe Leu Ser 1 5 10 15
Val Leu Asp Gly Ala Arg He Leu Cys Val Phe Pro Val Pro Ser Tyr 20 25 30
Ser His His Ala Val Phe Glu Ala Tyr Thr Asn Ala Leu Ala Ser Arg 35 40 45
Gly His Thr He Val Arg He Thr Pro Phe Pro Thr Lys Lys Asn Asp 50 55 60
Ser Ser Asn Val Thr Asp Val Asp Val Ser Leu Ser Lys Asp Tyr Phe 65 70 75 80
Lys Ser Leu Val Asp Arg Ser Arg Leu Phe Lys Lys Arg Gly Val He 85 90 95
Ser Glu Thr Ser Ser Val Thr Ala Arg Asn Tyr He Ser Leu Val His 100 105 110
Met Leu He Asp Gin Phe Ser Val Glu Ser Val Arg Gin Leu He Glu 115 120 125
Ser Asn Asn Val Phe Asp Leu Leu Val Thr Glu Ala Phe Leu Asp Tyr 130 135 140
Pro Leu Val Phe Ser His Leu Phe Gly Asp Val Pro Val He Gin He 145 150 155 160
Ser Ser Gly His Ala Leu Ala Glu Asn Phe Glu Thr Met Gly Ala Val 165 170 175
Ser Arg His Pro He Tyr Tyr Pro Asn Leu Trp Arg Asn Lys Phe Gin 180 185 190
Asn Leu Asn Val Trp Glu He He Thr Glu He Tyr Thr Glu Leu Val 195 200 205
Leu Tyr Leu Glu Phe Ala Arg Leu Ala Asp Glu Gin Thr Lys Met Leu 210 215 220
Arg His Gin Phe Gly Pro Asn Thr Pro Ser Val Glu Glu Leu Arg Gin 225 230 235 240
Arg Val Gin Leu Leu Phe Val Asn Thr His Pro Leu Phe Asp Asn Asn 245 250 255
Arg Pro Val Pro Pro Ser Val Gin Tyr Leu Gly Ser Leu His Leu Asp 260 265 270
Arg Asn Asn Asp Val Asp Glu Gin Gin Thr Met Asp Tyr Asn Leu Met 275 280 285
Gin Phe Leu Asn Asn Ser Thr Asn Gly Val Val Tyr Val Ser Phe Gly 290 295 300
Thr Ser He Arg Val Ser Asp Met Asp Asp Glu Phe Leu Phe Glu Phe 305 310 315 320
He Thr Ala Phe Lys Gin Leu Pro Tyr Asn He Leu Trp Lys Thr Asp 325 330 335
Gly Met Pro Met Glu His Val Leu Pro Lys Asn Val Leu Thr Gin Thr 340 345 350 Trp Leu Pro Gin His His Val Leu Lys His Ser Asn Val Val Ala Phe 355 360 365
Val Thr Gin Gly Gly Met Gin Ser Thr Asp Glu Ala He Asp Ala Cys 370 375 380
Val Pro Leu He Gly He Pro Phe Met Gly Asp Gin Ala Tyr Asn Thr 385 390 395 400
Asn Lys Tyr Glu Glu Leu Gly He Gly Arg Asn Leu Asp Pro Val Thr 405 410 415
Leu Thr Ser His He Leu Val Ser Ala Val Leu Asp Val Thr Val Asn 420 425 430
Asn Lys Ser Arg Tyr Thr Asp Asn He Lys Ala Leu Asn Arg Ser Thr 435 440 445
Asn Tyr Arg Thr Arg Lys Pro Met Glu Lys Ala He Trp Tyr Thr Glu 450 455 460
His Val He Asp Asn Gly Lys Asn Pro He Leu Lys Thr Lys Ala Ala 465 470 475 480
Asn Val Ser Tyr Ser Lys Tyr Tyr Met Ser Asp He He Val Pro Val 485 490 495
He Thr Phe Leu Val Met Thr His Leu Gly Gin Ala He Arg Arg Leu 500 505 510
Val Val He * 515

Claims

WE CLAIM :
1. A recombinant DNA molecule comprising a promoter selected from the group consisting of a baculovirus 6.9K promoter, a baculovirus DA26 promoter and a heat shock gene promoter, and a coding sequence for an insect-specific toxin, said coding sequence being operably linked to and expressed under the regulatory control of said promoter.
. The recombinant DNA molecule of claim 1 wherein said coding sequence encodes an insect-specific neurotoxin.
3. The recombinant DNA molecule of claim 2 wherein said coding sequence encodes an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin from a mite of the genus Pyemotes.
4. The recombinant DNA molecule of claim 3 wherein said coding sequence is as given in SEQ ID Nθ:l, nucleotides 120 to 873, or a sequence having at least about 70% nucleotide sequence homology thereto, and encoding a protein having insect-specific neurotoxin activity.
5. The recombinant DNA molecule of claim 4 wherein the encoded insect- specific paralytic neurotoxin comprises an amino acid as shown in SEQ ID Nθ:4.
6. The recombinant DNA molecule of claim 4 wherein the encoded insect- specific paralytic neurotoxin comprises an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2, from an aspartate encoded at about nucleotide 120 to a cysteine encoded at about nucleotide 873 in SEQ ID Nθ:l.
7. A baculovirus genetically engineered to contain a promoter selected from the group consisting of baculovirus 6.9K, baculovirus DA26 promoter and a heat shock gene promoter and a coding sequence for an insect-specific toxin, said coding sequence being expressed under the regulatory control of said promoter.
8. The baculovirus of claim 7 wherein said coding sequence encodes an insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin of a mite of the genus Pyemotes .
9. The baculovirus of claim 8 wherein the said coding sequence is as given in SEQ ID Nθ:l, nucleotides 120 to 873, or a sequence having at least about 70% nucleotide sequence homology thereto, and encoding a protein having insect-specific neurotoxin activity.
10. The baculovirus of claim 9 wherein the encoded insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin comprises an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID Nθ:2.
11. The baculovirus of claim 10 wherein the encoded insect-specific paralytic neurotoxin comprises an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 4.
12. The baculovirus of claim 7 wherein said baculovirus is a nucleopolyhedrovirus .
13. The baculovirus of any of claims 7 to 12 wherein said nucleopolyhedrovirus is Autographa californica Nuclear Polyhedrosis Virus (AcMNPV) or Helicoverpa zea Nucleopolyhedrosd Virus (HzSNPV).
14. The baculovirus of any of claims 7 to 12 wherein said heat shock promoter is a Drosophila melanogaster hsp70 promoter.
15. The baculovirus of claim 14 which is vHSP70tox34.
16. The baculovirus of claim 13 which is v6.9-Tox34 or vDA26-Tox34.
17. The baculovirus of claim 13 which is vHzDA26tox34 , vHSP70tox34, vHzEGTHSP70tox34, vHz6.9tox34, and vHzEGT6.9tox34 , vHzHSP70tox34 and vHzEGTDA26tox34.
18. The baculovirus of any of claims 7 to 17 in which a gene encoding an ecdysteroid UDP-glucosyl transferase has been inactivated.
19. An insect toxic composition comprising an amount of a baculovirus of any of claims 7 to 18 effective for causing a toxic effect on a target insect, and further comprising an agriculturally acceptable carrier.
20. A method for the control of insect pests comprising the step of applying the insect-toxic composition of claim 19 to a habitat of said insect pests .
PCT/US1997/018077 1996-10-01 1997-10-01 Biological insect control agents expressing insect-specific mite toxin genes, methods and compositions WO1998014578A1 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

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AU46715/97A AU722221B2 (en) 1996-10-01 1997-10-01 Biological insect control agents expressing insect-specific mite toxin genes, methods and compositions
NZ334604A NZ334604A (en) 1996-10-01 1997-10-01 A DNA molecule containing a baculovirus promoter operable linked to a coding sequnce for an insect-specific toxin; biological insect control agents comprising the altered baculovirus
JP10516964A JP2001501824A (en) 1996-10-01 1997-10-01 Biological insect control agents, methods and compositions expressing insect-specific mite toxin genes
BR9711840A BR9711840A (en) 1996-10-01 1997-10-01 Biological insect control agents expressing genes for expensive toxins specific to m-all insects and compositions

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

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US08/720,606 1996-10-01

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GB0820631D0 (en) * 2008-11-11 2008-12-17 London School Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Vectors
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