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Comparative Study
. 1989 Jan;53(1):12-20.
doi: 10.1016/0022-2011(89)90068-2.

Ingestion, dissolution, and proteolysis of the Bacillus sphaericus toxin by mosquito larvae

Comparative Study

Ingestion, dissolution, and proteolysis of the Bacillus sphaericus toxin by mosquito larvae

C Aly et al. J Invertebr Pathol. 1989 Jan.

Abstract

Larvae of Culex quinquefasciatus are much more susceptible to the toxin of Bacillus sphaericus than are larvae of Aedes aegypti. In the present study, the rate of ingestion, dissolution, and the cleavage by midgut proteases of the B. sphaericus toxin were compared in larvae of these species to determine whether these factors account for the differences in susceptibility. During filter feeding, larvae of both species removed significant quantities of B. sphaericus toxin from suspensions. Filtration rates for 1 hr, the time at which C. quinquefasciatus exhibited marked intoxication, were higher for A. aegypti (576-713 microliters/larva/hr) than for C. quinquefasciatus (446-544 microliters/larva/hr). Within 24 hr of exposure, A. aegypti larvae ingested 97-99% of the toxin particulates and suffered not more than 10% mortality in suspensions which induced complete mortality in C. quinquefasciatus within 2 hr of exposure. Quantification of the particulate toxin present in larvae after exposure to B. sphaericus suspensions revealed that larvae of both species contained only minor amounts of the toxin, suggesting the larvae had been able to solubilize the toxin after ingestion. Proteases recovered from the feces of larvae cleaved at 43-kDa protein isolated from B. sphaericus toxin extract to 40 kDa in both species. Thus, differences in susceptibility to the B. sphaericus toxin between A. aegypti and C. quinquefasciatus are not due to differences in rates of ingestion, dissolution, or the specificity of proteases.

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