Abstract

Twelve Bacillus thuringiensis strains were isolated from intestinal tracts of Cydia pomonella larvae during epizootics in different laboratory insect culture lines. Phenotypic and genetic similarity of these isolates, together with two cultured from Leucoma salicis larvae and 14 reference B. thuringiensis strains were determined. The epizootic bacteria did not form a single group based on numerical analysis of biochemical properties. Simple RAPD method with only one primer does not allow estimating the genetic similarity of B. thuringiensis strains. We propose a novel strategy based on combining several DNA patterns obtained by RAPD technique with different primers for B. thuringiensis typing. Majority of infections in the C. pomonella culture lines were caused by bacteria with different genotypes. However, two isolates cultured from infected insects at different time (one strain was isolated in 1990 and the other in 1992) had identical DNA fingerprint that suggested a possibility of these bacteria to survive in the laboratory and to cause infections in different years. The results of SDS–PAGE of whole-cell proteins revealed a possibility to apply protein profile analysis in epidemiological investigations of infections caused by B. thuringiensis. Strains with identical DNA patterns had very similar whole-cell protein profiles.

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