Affiliation:
1. Biocontrol and Biosecurity, AgResearch, Lincoln, New Zealand
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Serratia entomophila
and
Serratia proteamaculans
(
Enterobacteriaceae
) cause amber disease in the grass grub
Costelytra zealandica
(Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae), an important pasture pest in New Zealand. Larval disease symptoms include cessation of feeding, clearance of the gut, amber coloration, and eventual death. A 155-kb plasmid, pADAP, carries the genes
sepA
,
sepB
, and
sepC
, which are essential for production of amber disease symptoms. Transposon insertions in any of the
sep
genes in pADAP abolish gut clearance but not cessation of feeding, indicating the presence of an antifeeding gene(s) elsewhere on pADAP. Based on deletion analysis of pADAP and subsequent sequence data, a 47-kb clone was constructed, which when placed in either an
Escherichia coli
or a
Serratia
background exerted strong antifeeding activity and often led to rapid death of the infected grass grub larvae. Sequence data show that the antifeeding component is part of a large gene cluster that may form a defective prophage and that six potential members of this prophage are present in
Photorhabdus luminescens
subsp.
laumondii
TTO1, a species which also has
sep
gene homologues.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
127 articles.
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