Abstract
The multisegmented ovoidal inclusion of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis was found to be composed of two structurally and biochemically distinct components. Electron microscopy of the inclusion revealed it to be composed mainly of osmiophobic or lightly stained segments crystallized in a lattice showing a repeat of approximately 4.3 nm. These light segments of the inclusions were shared by osmiophylic darkly stained segments with a crystal lattice repeat of approximately 7.8 nm. The lightly stained segments were soluble at pH 9.2 in sodium dodecyl sulfate-dithiothreitol-Tris-hydrochloride. The extracts of lightly stained segments were lytic to mammalian erythrocytes, and the precipitate obtained by lowering the pH to 5.2 was toxic to the larvae of Aedes egypti. The dark inclusion segments remaining, besides being much less toxic to larvae, were nonlytic to erythrocytes and were soluble at pH 10.5 in sodium dodecyl sulfate-dithiothreitol-Tris-hydrochloride. The light segment was composed of two major polypeptide doublets with molecular weights of 145,000 and 135,000, and 27,000 and 26,500, and the dark segments were composed of a single major polypeptide with a molecular-weight of 70,000. Hence, the inclusion of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis is more complex than previously reported, and we conclude that the toxin may be the polypeptide with a molecular weight of 27,000 and 26,500.
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