Affiliation:
1. Center for Molecular Microbiology and Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Bath, Bath BA2 7AY, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Two recently sequenced genomes of the insect-pathogenic bacterium
Photorhabdus
and a large
Serratia entomophila
plasmid, pADAP, have phage-related loci containing putative toxin effector genes, designated the “
Photorhabdus
virulence cassettes” (PVCs). In
S. entomophila
, the single plasmid PVC confers antifeeding activity on larvae of a beetle. Here, we show that recombinant
Escherichia coli
expressing PVC-containing cosmids from
Photorhabdus
has injectable insecticidal activity against larvae of the wax moth. Electron microscopy showed that the structure of the PVC products is similar to the structure of the antibacterial R-type pyocins. However, unlike these bacteriocins, the PVC products of
Photorhabdus
have no demonstrable antibacterial activity. Instead, injection of
Photorhabdus
PVC products destroys insect hemocytes, which undergo dramatic actin cytoskeleton condensation. Comparison of the genomic organizations of several PVCs showed that they have a conserved phage-like structure with a variable number of putative anti-insect effectors encoded at one end. Expression of these putative effectors directly inside cultured cells showed that they are capable of rearranging the actin cytoskeleton. Together, these data show that the PVCs are functional homologs of the
S. entomophila
antifeeding genes and encode physical structures that resemble bacteriocins. This raises the interesting hypothesis that the PVC products are bacteriocin-like but that they have been modified to attack eukaryotic host cells.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
147 articles.
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