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williamson-et-al-2023-structure-of-the-lysinibacillus-sphaericus-tpp49aa1-pesticidal-protein-elucidated-from-natural.pdf (2.35 MB)

Structure of the Lysinibacillus sphaericus Tpp49Aa1 pesticidal protein elucidated from natural crystals using MHz-SFX

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-12-18, 14:01 authored by LJ Williamson, M Galchenkova, HL Best, RJ Bean, A Munke, S Awel, G Pena, J Knoska, R Schubert, K Dörner, HW Park, DK Bideshi, A Henkel, V Kremling, B Klopprogge, E Lloyd-Evans, MT Young, J Valerio, M Kloos, M Sikorski, G Mills, J Bielecki, H Kirkwood, C Kim, R de Wijn, K Lorenzen, PL Xavier, A Rahmani Mashhour, L Gelisio, O Yefanov, AP Mancuso, BA Federici, HN Chapman, Neil CrickmoreNeil Crickmore, PJ Rizkallah, C Berry, D Oberthür
The Lysinibacillus sphaericus proteins Tpp49Aa1 and Cry48Aa1 can together act as a toxin toward the mosquito Culex quinquefasciatus and have potential use in biocontrol. Given that proteins with sequence homology to the individual proteins can have activity alone against other insect species, the structure of Tpp49Aa1 was solved in order to understand this protein more fully and inform the design of improved biopesticides. Tpp49Aa1 is naturally expressed as a crystalline inclusion within the host bacterium, and MHz serial femtosecond crystallography using the novel nanofocus option at an X-ray free electron laser allowed rapid and high-quality data collection to determine the structure of Tpp49Aa1 at 1.62 Å resolution. This revealed the packing of Tpp49Aa1 within these natural nanocrystals as a homodimer with a large intermolecular interface. Complementary experiments conducted at varied pH also enabled investigation of the early structural events leading up to the dissolution of natural Tpp49Aa1 crystals-a crucial step in its mechanism of action. To better understand the cooperation between the two proteins, assays were performed on a range of different mosquito cell lines using both individual proteins and mixtures of the two. Finally, bioassays demonstrated Tpp49Aa1/Cry48Aa1 susceptibility of Anopheles stephensi, Aedes albopictus, and Culex tarsalis larvae-substantially increasing the potential use of this binary toxin in mosquito control.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

ISSN

0027-8424

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Issue

49

Volume

120

Page range

e2203241120-

Department affiliated with

  • Biochemistry Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes