Abstract

The HD-1 strain ofBacillus thuringiensis (B.t.)kurstaki contains three homologous genes coding for 130–134-kilodalton entomocidal proteins [13]. In the present study, expression levels of these genes in strains of B.t.kurstaki were determined. In attempts to isolate a protein coded by a single gene, a number of variants were derived from strains of B.t.kurstaki, such as HD-263 and HD-1, by plasmid curing. The entomocidal proteins produced by the parental strains and their plasmid-cured variants were isolated by Sephacryl S-300 column chromatography and peptide-mapped by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The results indicated that HD-263 produced two distinctive proteins, one identical with the protein of HD-73, which contains only a “6.6 kb Hind III class” gene, and the other protein presumably coded by a “4.5 kb Hind III class” gene. HPLC analysis revealed that 70% of the total protein in the HD-263 crystals consisted of the product of the 6.6 kb gene (6.6-kb protein), and the remaining 30% was the 4.5-kb protein. In the case of HD-1, the crystal consisted of at least two different proteins in equal amounts (50% each). The gene coding for one of these proteins was presumed to be a “5.3 kb Hind III class” gene. The remaining 50% of the HD-1 crystal was accounted for by a protein similar to the 4.5-kb protein identified in HD-263. It appeared that the 6.6-kb protein was expressed poorly, if it was indeed expressed, in the HD-1 strain.

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