Bacillus thuringiensis Crystal Protein Cry6Aa Triggers Caenorhabditis elegans Necrosis Pathway Mediated by Aspartic Protease (ASP-1)
Author(s) -
Fengjuan Zhang,
Donghai Peng,
Chunsheng Cheng,
Wei Zhou,
Shouyong Ju,
Danfeng Wan,
Ziquan Yu,
Jianwei Shi,
Yaoyao Deng,
Fenshan Wang,
Xiaobo Ye,
Zhenfei Hu,
Jian Lin,
Lifang Ruan,
Ming Sun
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
plos pathogens
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.719
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1553-7374
pISSN - 1553-7366
DOI - 10.1371/journal.ppat.1005389
Subject(s) - biology , caenorhabditis elegans , propidium iodide , necrosis , programmed cell death , microbiology and biotechnology , protease , toxin , bacillus thuringiensis , biochemistry , apoptosis , enzyme , genetics , bacteria , gene
Cell death plays an important role in host-pathogen interactions. Crystal proteins (toxins) are essential components of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) biological pesticides because of their specific toxicity against insects and nematodes. However, the mode of action by which crystal toxins to induce cell death is not completely understood. Here we show that crystal toxin triggers cell death by necrosis signaling pathway using crystal toxin Cry6Aa- Caenorhabditis elegans toxin-host interaction system, which involves an increase in concentrations of cytoplasmic calcium, lysosomal lyses, uptake of propidium iodide, and burst of death fluorescence. We find that a deficiency in the necrosis pathway confers tolerance to Cry6Aa toxin. Intriguingly, the necrosis pathway is specifically triggered by Cry6Aa, not by Cry5Ba, whose amino acid sequence is different from that of Cry6Aa. Furthermore, Cry6Aa-induced necrosis pathway requires aspartic protease (ASP-1). In addition, ASP-1 protects Cry6Aa from over-degradation in C . elegans . This is the first demonstration that deficiency in necrosis pathway confers tolerance to Bt crystal protein, and that Cry6A triggers necrosis represents a newly added necrosis paradigm in the C . elegans . Understanding this model could lead to new strategies for nematode control.
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