Bioinsecticides based on the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) are widely used as safe alternatives to chemical insecticides.The insecticidal activity of Bt is occasioned by a protein toxin contained in parasporal crystals (Cry proteins) that are synthesized and laid down alongside the endospore during sporulation.The specificity of toxin action is associated with the subspecies of Bt and the individual Cry toxins they produce.Although a number of commercial Bt formulations are available to control moths, mosquitoes and beetles, there are none that control the red imported fire ant (RIFA) Solenopsis invicta.
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.The present report is the first to describe the insecticidal activity of the Cry3A protein toxin, produced by Bacillus thuringiensis subsp.
tenebrionis (Btt), against the RIFA as well as some of its key biochemical properties.Currently available commercial formulations of Btt are designed to control beetles such as the Colorado potato beetle, not ants.The Cry3A toxin (MW ~66 kDa) is embedded in a larger polypeptide (protoxin, MW ~73 kDa) and is released from the toxin enzymatically.
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.Once activated, it can be administered to the RIFA as a soluble protein that most likely binds to an attendant receptor in the epithelial cells that line the wall of the larval ventriculus, killing the insect.Properly customized, the Cry3A toxin is a potential candidate for fire ant control.