Recognition of a core fragment of Beauveria bassiana hydrophobin gene promoter (P hyd1) and its special use in improving fungal biocontrol potential

To identify a suitable promoter for use in engineering fungal entomopathogens to improve heterologous gene expression and fungal biocontrol potential, a 1798 bp promoter (Phyd1) upstream of Beauveria bassiana class I hydrophobin gene (hyd1) was optimized by upstream truncation and site-directed mutation. A truncated 1290 bp fragment (Phyd1-t1) drove eGFP expression in B. bassiana much more efficiently than full-length Phyd1. Further truncating Phyd1-t1 to 1179, 991 and 791 bp or mutating one of the binding domains of three transcription factors in Phyd1-t1 reduced significantly the expression of eGFP (enhanced green fluorescence protein). Under Phyd1-t1 control, eGFP was expressed more abundantly in conidiogenic cells and conidia than in mycelia. Therefore, Phyd1-t1 was used to integrate a bacterium-derived, insect midgut-specific toxin (vip3Aa1) gene into B. bassiana, yielding a transgenic strain (BbHV8) expressing 9.8-fold more toxin molecules in conidia than a counterpart strain (BbV28) expressing the toxin under the control of PgpdA, a promoter widely used for gene expression in fungi. Consequently, BbHV8 showed much higher per os virulence to Spodoptera litura larvae than BbV28 in standardized bioassays with normal conidia for both cuticle penetration and ingestion or heat-killed conidia for ingestion only. Conclusively, Phyd1-t1 is a useful tool for enhancing beneficial protein expression, such as vip3Aa1, in fungal conidia, which are the active ingredients of mycoinsecticides.


Introduction
Entomopathogenic fungi, such as Beauveria bassiana and Metarhizium anisopliae, are fungal biocontrol agents widely applied to arthropod pest control (Feng et al., 1994;Roberts and St Leger, 2004). Candidate strains for commercial development are usually selected for their high virulence to target pests and tolerance to high temperature (Rangel et al., 2005;Li and Feng, 2009), solar UV irradiation (Braga et al., 2001;Huang and Feng, 2009) and fungicide sprays often encountered for plant disease control in the field (Zou et al., 2006;Song et al., 2012). However, not all desired traits exist in a candidate strain. This makes it necessary to engineer genetically the fungal candidate for more improved traits.
Fungal genetic improvement requires a powerful promoter to drive steadily replicable expression of target genes in a host strain (Ruiz-Diez, 2002). A widely applied fungal promoter is PgpdA, i.e. the promoter of gpdA gene encoding Aspergillus nidulans glyceraldehyde-3phosphate dehydrogenase. This promoter enables to drive the expression of various heterologous genes in filamentous fungi (Brakhage et al., 1999). Other fungal promoters identified include those that activate the genes of Aspergillus alcR and glaA (Punt et al., 1995;Santerre-Henriksen et al., 1999;Mathieu et al., 2000), Pseudozyma flocculasa actin (Neveu et al., 2007) and Penicillium funiculosum histone H4 (Belshaw et al., 2002). Two promoters that regulate the transcriptional expressions of B. bassiana gpd (Liao et al., 2008) and M. anisopliae Tef-1a gene (Nakazato et al., 2006) have also been reported. However, none of the fungal promoters is known to drive the expression of beneficial genes specifically in fungal conidia, which are usually the active ingredients of mycoinsecticides (de Faria and Wraight, 2007).
Hydrophobins are small amphipathic proteins ubiquitously present in filamentous fungi and are involved in a variety of biological functions, such as host attachment, pathogenesis, fruit body formation and sporulation (Wösten, 2001). A 188 bp core fragment of cryparin gene promoter of Cryphonectria parasitica (Kim et al., 2008) has been found to drive high expression of heterologous proteins in the same fungus (Kwon et al., 2009). A gene encoding B. bassiana class I hydrophobin (hyd1) was expressed well in almost all developmental stages of the entomopathogenic fungus (Cho et al., 2007). The previous studies hint that the hyd1 promoter region might harbour a core fragment to regulate heterologous protein expression specifically during conidiophore development and conidiation by fungal engineering.
This study sought to identify the core fragment by analysing the full-length 1798 bp promoter (Phyd1) and the binding domains of its transcription factors (TFs) through upstream truncation and site mutation. The site-mutated binding domains included the common DNA-binding motif of the basic helix-loop-helix regulator StuA (WCGCG-WNM), the conserved domain of the high-mobility-group box factor Mat-Mc (YCNATTGTYW) and the single zinc finger DNA-binding motif (Cys-X2-Cys-X17-Cys-X2-Cys type) of the regulator NIT 2 (TATCTM). These TFs are known to regulate gene expression in fungi through interaction with specific DNA-binding motifs in promoter regions (Dutton et al., 1997;Kjaerulff et al., 1997;Feng and Marzluf, 1998;Scherer et al., 2002). The full-length Phyd1 and four truncated and three site-mutated fragments of it were compared with the well-known promoter PgpdA for their efficiencies in driving the expression of enhanced green fluorescence protein (eGFP) in B. bassiana. An optimized fragment was used to enhance the fungal biocontrol potential by engineering B. bassiana with a gene encoding the insecticidal protein vip3Aa1 (an insect midgut-acting toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis) for high expression in transgenic conidia.

Features of the Phyd1 promoter
A flanking sequence upstream of the initial codon (ATG) of the hyd1 gene (Cho et al., 2007) was amplified as a 1798 bp fragment (GenBank ID: GU936631) from the genomic DNA of B. bassiana ARSEF 2860 (Bb2860 herein) using paired primers Phyd1-F/R (Table 1). Online sequence analysis indicated the locations of initial transcription site at -106 bp, typical TATA box (TATAAA) at -24 bp, CAAT box at -92 bp and a 15 bp C/T-rich region at -85 bp. The binding domains of the three TFs StuA (GCTCGCGAGC), NIT 2 (TATCTA) and Mat-Mc (TCGATT-GTCT) were located at -201, -626 and -1066 bp respectively.

Core fragment of Phyd1
The core fragment of Phyd1 was located using four truncated and three site-mutated Phyd1 fragments to drive eGFP expression in transgenic Bb2860. Relative fluorescence intensities (RFI) under their controls (Fig. 1a) differed significantly (F8,18 = 114, P < 0.0001 in one-way analysis of variance). The full-length Phyd1 was capable of driving eGFP expression but its efficiency was 1.6-fold lower than the Phyd1-t1 counterpart. This truncated fragment resulted in maximal RFI (1081 Ϯ 104) in transgenic colonies. This RFI was 15.6-fold higher than that from the PgpdA-controlled transformants. However, further truncating Phyd1-t1 (1290 bp) to Phyd1-t2 (1179 bp), Phyd1-t3 (991 bp) and Phyd1-t4 (791 bp) reduced the eGFP expression by 16.7%, 71.3% and 98% respectively. All site mutations in Phyd1-t1 also led to significant RFI reductions in the transgenic colonies (Fisher's least significant difference, P < 0.05). The net RFI reductions were 17%, 52% and 81% for the mutated binding domains of Mat-Mc, NIT2 and StuA respectively. Apparently, Phyd1-t1 vectoring the essential binding domains of the three TFs was the core promoter fragment to maximize heterologous gene expression in B. bassiana. Interestingly, the eGFP expression under Phyd1-t1 control was barely detected during the first 48 h of incubation of selected transformants on Sabouraud dextrose agar plus yeast extract (SDAY) at 25°C but rapidly increased following this time period. The eGFP-emitted fluorescence under laser confocal microscope was much more intense in conidiogenic cells and conidia than in younger mycelia (Fig. 2b). Mean RFI in the colonies increased from 2.4 on day 2 to 1187 on day 4 and reached a peak of 1842 on day 7 (Fig. 2c), when conidiation was completed. These data indicated that Phyd1-t1 enabled the activation of gene expression specifically during the conidiophore development and conidiation of B. bassiana.

Overexpression of vip3Aa1 under Phyd1-t1 control
The binary plasmid carrying the vip3Aa1 and Phyd1-t1 elements ( Fig. 2a) was integrated into the competent blastospores of Bb2860. Eight positive transformants were identified from 12 colonies grown on the selective plates through PCR analysis (Fig. 2b). Quantitative realtime PCR (qRT-PCR) assays ( Fig. 2c) indicated that the transcript levels of the toxin gene in their colonies grown for 4 days on SDAY plates at 25°C were enhanced by 3.4to 112-fold compared with the transcript of the same gene in BbV28 under PgpdA control. Moreover, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) indicated that the amounts of target toxin produced in the mycelia ( Laser confocal fluorescence (left) and bright (right) images of samples of an eGFP-expressing colony (b1-b3: grown at 25°C for 2, 4 and 7 days respectively under Phyd1-t1 control; b4: the same images of a fungal mass from 4 day wild-type colony). Scale bars: 10 mm. c. RFI trend during the 7 day growth of three Phyd1-t1 controlled transformants on SDAY plates at 25°C. PCR was enhanced by 2.9-to 7.8-fold and 4.7-to 9.8-fold respectively. Of those, BbHV8 was selected as the best transformant due to its maximal levels in both gene transcription and protein expression.
Mature and active vip3Aa1 forms (~88 and~62 kDa respectively) were detected in the mycelial and conidial extracts of BbHV8 and BbV28 by Western blotting with the vip3Aa1 antibody (Fig. 2f). In immunogold localization, the mean (Ϯ SD) densities of 10 nm colloidal gold particles on the five ultrathin sections of Bb2860, BbV28 and BbHV8 conidia (Fig. 2g-i) labelled by the rabbit antibody and goat anti-rabbit IgG antibody were estimated as 0, 21 (Ϯ 4) and 168 (Ϯ 17) particles per square micrometre respectively. The labelled vip3Aa1 density in BbHV8 conidia was eightfold of that in BbV28, well in agreement with the ELISA estimates.
incubation at saturated humidity (Fig. 3b). These data indicate that BbHV8 not only killed the younger larvae more rapidly than BbV28 and Bb2860 but also showed high killing activity on later stage larvae. The enhanced insecticidal activity of BbHV8 to S. litura larvae was likely attributable to the ingestion of more toxin molecules expressed in conidia.
Interestingly, this assumption was confirmed in the bioassays with the heat-treated conidia of the three strains. After exposure to 42°C for 3 h, all suspension samples contained no viable conidia after 24 h incubation on SDAY plates at 25°C. Fed with leaf discs harbouring 1394 (Ϯ 28) heat-killed conidia per square millimetre, the secondinstar larvae of S. litura suffered from 100% and 66.7% moralities caused by BbHV8 and BbV28 on day 6 respectively, whereas no substantial mortality was attributed to the wild-type strain. No fungal outgrowths were found on all cadavers. The LT 50s and associated 95% CIs (Fig. 3a) were estimated as 3.0 (2.8-3.1) and 4.7 (4.4-5.1) days for BbHV8 (c 2 = 2.72, d.f. = 4, P = 0.61) and BbV28 (c 2 = 8.59, d.f. = 5, P = 0.13) respectively. These data indicated that the ingestion of non-viable conidia harbouring more vip3Aa1 toxin molecules resulted in faster and more frequent mortality of the larvae.

Discussion
As presented above, Phyd1-t1 has proved to be the core fragment of the hyd1 gene promoter of B. bassiana. It harbours the essential binding domains of the TFs StuA, Mat-Mc and NIT 2 as well as a C/T-rich region, which exist in other fungal promoters and are crucial to initiating gene transcription (Toda et al., 2001;Bertossa et al., 2004). The full-length Phyd1 was much less efficient in driving eGFP expression than the truncated core fragment (Fig. 1a), suggesting possible existence of negative repressive element(s) in the 508 bp region upstream of Phyd1-t1. The fact that truncating Phyd1-t2 to Phyd1-t3 caused 66% RFI reduction in transgenic colonies may indicate that a positive regulatory element might exist in the 189 bp region upstream of Phyd1-t3. Mutating the StuA binding domain with a HindIII restriction site reduced drastically eGFP expression by 80%, an indication that this domain may be crucial to the core fragment. A 51% RFI decrease caused by the mutation of the NIT 2 binding domain also consolidates its importance in regulating the gene expression.
Moreover, the temporal and spatial pattern of eGFP expression under Phyd1-t1 control ( Fig. 1b and c) has clarified the ability of this core promoter fragment to drive heterologous gene expression specifically during the conidiophore development and conidiation of B. bassiana. This supports a previous conclusion that hydrophobin-coding genes are usually transcribed at the stages of fruit body formation and sporulation (Wösten, 2001) and is also in agreement with the steady increase of hyd1 expression in B. bassiana colonies during a growth period of 3-28 days at 26°C (Cho et al., 2007).
Like the eGFP expression pattern, the insect intestine toxin vip3Aa1 was expressed much more abundantly in the conidia than in the mycelia of BbHV8, which was engineered under Phyd1-t1 control. Compared with BbV28 engineered with the same toxin gene under PgpdA control (Qin et al., 2010), BbHV8 produced nearly 10-fold more toxin molecules in conidia and thus killed S. litura larvae more rapidly and effectively irrespective of normal or heat-killed conidia ingested (Fig. 3a). Due to the alkaline midgut environment of S. litura (Skibbe et al., 1996), BbV28 conidia were shown to release the active form of the vip3Aa1 toxin into the midguts of S. litura larvae soon after ingestion (Qin et al., 2010). Theoretically, transgenic conidia harbouring more midgut-specific toxin molecules could release a greater quantity into larval midgut to achieve higher insecticidal activity after ingestion and appears to support the acceleration of BbHV8 killing action due to its higher titer of toxin.
Furthermore, Phyd1-t1 is a small promoter (only 1290 bp) compared with the constitutive gpdA gene promoter (2200 bp) widely used in heterologous gene expression in fungi (Punt et al., 2002). Due to its capability of driving the expression of eGFP and vip3Aa1 genes much more efficiently during conidiation than PgpdA, Phyd1-t1 is of great potential for use in engineering fungal biocontrol agents to improve their virulence to target pests and tolerance to environmental stresses, thereby facilitating the development of more efficacious and fieldpersistent mycoinsecticides.
Finally, although there is always a concern about environmental safety for the field application of genetically engineered fungi, we think that environmental risk rising from the use of transgenic B. bassiana strains expressing vip3A toxins under real conditions would be minimized for the following reasons. First, dozens of B. bassiana formulations have been registered for global pest control (de Faria and Wraight, 2007) without safety problems documented. Second, vip3A toxins act specifically on caterpillar midgut cells (Yu et al., 1997) and are safe to vertebrates (Brake et al., 2005;Peng et al., 2006). Transgenic crops expressing vip3A toxins have been permitted for field release (Llewellyn et al., 2007). Third and more interestingly, the new transgenic strain could not grow out of the caterpillars that rapidly died of conidial ingestion (Fig. 3b), suggesting a much less chance for its survival in the field and increasing its potential for commercial development. Nonetheless, it is essential to evaluate strictly its environmental safety before field release, warranting further study in the future.

Microbial strains and culture media
The wild-type strain B. bassiana ARSEF 2860 from the RW Holley Center for Agriculture and Health (Ithaca, NY, USA) was used as a recipient in gene transformation and maintained at 4°C on the slants of Sabouraud dextrose agar plus 1% yeast extract (SDAY). Escherichia coli DH5a and E. coli BL21(DE3) from Invitrogen (Shanghai, China) were cultured at 37°C in Luria-Bertani medium plus ampicillin (100 mg ml -1 ) or kanamycin (50 mg ml -1 ) depending on resistance type used for vector construction.

Cloning and analysis of full-length Phyd1 region
The hyd1 gene was amplified from the extracted genomic DNA of Bb2860 in 50 ml reaction system via PCR (35 cycles of 30 s at 94°C, 30 s at 60°C and 30 s at 72°C) with paired primers Hyd1-F/R (Table 1), which were designed in terms of the hyd1 open-reading frame (GenBank ID: EF452344). Its upstream region was obtained by two runs of DNA walking with SpeedUp TM Premix Kit II from Neuro-Hemin Biotec (Hangzhou, China). This putative promoter region was analysed online by Motif Search (http://motif.genome.jp) and TFSEARCH (http://www.Cbrc.jp/research/db/TFSEARCH.html) to locate binding domains of possible TFs as well as initial transcription site, TATA box and CAAT box. The full-length promoter sequence (Phyd1) was then amplified using the primers Phyd1-F/R (Table 1).

Identification of a core fragment in Phyd1
Four truncated Phyd1 fragments were amplified from the genomic DNA of Bb2860 using the common downstream primer Phyd1-R with NcoI site and the respective upstream primers Phyd1-t1F, Phyd1-t2F, Phyd1-t3F and Phyd1-t4F each carrying a BglII site (Table 1). All PCR products were digested with BglII/NcoI and introduced into BglII/NcoI linearized pET29b-eGFP , forming pET29b-Phyd1x-eGFP, in which x was the amplified fragment of -1798, -1290, -1179, -991 or -791 bp to drive the eGFP expression. The Phyd1x-eGFP cassette digested with XbaI was inserted into pAN52-bar  digested with XbaI and dephosphorylated in advance, generating binary plasmids pAN52-Phyd1x-eGFP-bar linking eGFP and bar [phosphinothricin (PPT) resistance gene] in the same transcriptional direction. For comparison, four more binary plasmids were constructed by replacing Phyd1x in the cassette respectively with the common promoter PgpdA and the 1290 bp fragment, in which the binding domain of one of three TFs (StuA, Mat-Mc and NIT2) was replaced with the HindIII restriction site using paired primers (Table 1). All DNA samples were cloned into pGEM-T-Easy (Promega, Madison, WI, USA) for sequencing at Invitrogen (Shanghai, China).
Each of the nine binary plasmids was inserted into the Bb2860 genome via blastospore transformation . Transgenic colonies grown on Czapek's plates containing 200 mg PPT per millilitre were examined via PCR with eGFP-F/R primers (Table 1) or under fluorescence microscope to confirm the presence of integrated eGFP. Three positive transformants arbitrarily taken from each of the eGFP constructs were grown on cellophane membranes overlaid on SDAY plates for 4 days at 25°C and 12:12 h (light : dark cycle) and then measured for their fluorescence intensities in a spectrophotometer FP-6500 (JASCO) at the excitation/emission wavelengths of 484/512 nm. Each measurement was expressed as RFI per milligram protein by deducting the background effect of wild-type strain (control) grown under the same conditions. Protein concentration in each of the extracts from the 4 day colonies was assessed using BCA (bicinchoninic acid) Protein Assay Kit (KeyGen, Nanjing, China) and bovine serum albumin (BSA) as standard. To monitor temporal pattern of eGFP expression, three transformants under a Phyd1 fragment that maximized the eGFP expression were grown for 7 days on SDAY at the same regime and their RFI values were measured at 24 h interval. Colony samples taken during the growth period were visualized for fluorescence and bright images at the same wavelengths of excitation and emission under laser-scanning confocal microscope (Carl Zeiss, Germany).

Expression of vip3Aa1 gene in B. bassiana
The eGFP element in pAN52-Phyd1-t1-eGFP-bar, in which Phyd1-t1 drove maximal eGFP expression, was replaced with the insecticidal protein gene vip3Aa1 (GenBank ID: DQ539887.1). The resultant plasmid pAN52-Phyd1-t1-vip3Aa1-bar was then transformed into competent Bb2860 blastospores prepared with a previous method . The blastospores were spread on PPT-inclusive Czapek's plates for colony formation. Positive transformants were identified from the colonies by PCR with Vip-F/R and Bar-F/R (Table 1). Their vip3Aa1 transcript levels in 4 day SDAY colonies grown at 25°C were compared with the transcript of an engineered strain (BbV28) expressing the same gene under PgpdA control (Qin et al., 2010). Reverse transcription of 5 mg of total RNA extracted from the colonies of each transformant was achieved using PrimeScript TM RT reagent kit (Takara, Japan). Synthesized cDNA (10 ng ml -1 ) was used as template for qRT-PCR with qVip-F/R and q18S-F/R (Table 1). The expression of the fungal 18S rRNA was used as internal standard. The level of vip3Aa1 transcript in each cDNA sample was assessed using the 2 -DDCt method (Livak and Schmittgen, 2001). The ratio of an estimate from each transformant over that from BbV28 was defined as the relative expression level of vip3Aa1.
Five transformants selected by qRT-PCR were further compared with BbV28 through ELISA to assess the levels of the target protein (vip3Aa1) expressed in mycelia and conidia from SDAY colonies grown for 4 and 7 days respectively. Protein extracts from the mycelia and conidia were prepared as described previously (Qin et al., 2010). Three 100 ml aliquots (replicates) of each extract diluted with coating buffer (0.05 M carbonate, pH 9.6) were pipetted onto 96-well plate for overnight incubation at 4°C, followed by washing with 0.15 M phosphate-buffered saline (PBS, pH 7.4). Subsequently, each well was added with 200 ml of blocking buffer (0.1% BSA in coating buffer) for 1 h blocking at 37°C and then with 100 ml of diluted vip3Aa1 polyclonal antibody for 1 h reaction at 37°C. After PBS washing, each well was loaded with pre-diluted horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Sigma) for 1 h incubation at 37°C. After final PBS washing, each well was loaded with 100 ml of TMB (3,3′,5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine) Liquid-1 Component (Amresco, Solon, OH, USA) for 20 min reaction at 37°C in dark and then with 100 ml of 2 M H2SO4 to terminate the reaction. Finally, OD450 value was read from each well using Model 680 Microplate Reader (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA). For each transformant, the relative expression level of vip3Aa1 was estimated as the ratio of its reading over that from BbV28. A transformant (BbHV8) expressing the highest level of the target protein was selected for assays below.
The presence or absence of vip3Aa1 in the mycelia and conidia of BbHV8, BbV28 and Bb2860 (negative control) was detected by Western blotting with the polyclonal antibody of vip3Aa1 (Qin et al., 2010). The density of vip3Aa1 molecules expressed in aerial conidia of each strain was estimated by immunogold localization. Briefly, conidia were fixed, dehydrated and embedded in pre-cooled resin of Lowicryl K4M (Plano, Wetzlar, Germany) under UV light of 360 nm wavelength. The final resin pyramids were cut into sections of 50-70 nm and mounted on 200-mesh Bioden Meshcement (Oken Shoji, Tokyo, Japan) coated with nickel grids (TAAB Laboratories, Berkshire, UK). The obverse side of the grids was treated for 30 min with the solution of 50 mM PBS (pH 7.2), 1% BSA, 0.02% PEG-20000, 100 mM NaCl and 0.1% NaNO3 and then incubated with 150 ¥ dilution of the rabbit antibody for 1 h and then with 100 ¥ dilution of 10 nm colloidal gold goat anti-rabbit IgG (Sigma) for 1 h. The ultrathin sections were finally contrasted with 1% uranyl acetate for 12 min and visualized under transmission electron microscope. For each strain, the 10 nm colloidal gold particles (targeted molecules) were counted from each of five sections labelled by the two antibodies and the mean density of labelled particles was estimated as the number of particles per unit area (mm 2 ) based on the count in the total area of each ellipsoidal section.

Bioassays for insecticidal activities
Bb2860, BbV28 and BbHV8 were incubated on steamed rice in Petri dishes (15 cm diameter) at 25°C for 7 days, followed by drying under ventilation at 33°C for 24 h. Aerial conidia were harvested from the rice cultures through a vibrating sieve, vacuum-dried to~5% water content at ambient temperature and then stored in glass tubes at -20°C for use within 3 months.
Aerial conidia of each strain was suspended in 0.02% Tween 80 and standardized to the concentration of 2 ¥ 10 7 conidia per millilitre. Three aliquots (replicates) of 1 ml each conidial suspension were separately sprayed onto lotus leaf discs (~13 cm diameter) from the nozzle of Automatic Potter Spray Tower (Burkhard Scientific, Uxbridge, Middx, UK) at the working pressure of 0.7 kg cm -2 . Each leaf disc under the spray harboured 30-40 S. litura larvae (instar II, III or IV). This experimental design was chosen to mimic field spray conditions, allowing the sprayed conidia to attach to cuticle for normal infection and to be ingested by the larvae for per os infection. Under each spray, the concentration of the conidia deposited onto the larvae and/or leaf disc was determined using five microscopic counts from a glass coverslip placed on the leaf disc. After spray, all larvae on the leaf discs were reared in Petri dishes (15 cm diameter) at 25°C and 12:12 h for up to 8 days. The leaf residues were replaced every 1 or 2 days with fresh leaf discs sprayed as above in advance. Three sprays of 1 ml 0.02% Tween 80 were used as blank controls in each bioassay. Larval mortality in each dish was examined daily during the period. The larvae killed by each strain were incubated at saturated humidity for 3-5 days. Cadavers with typical fungal outgrowths were considered to have died of normal fungal infection. Otherwise, their deaths were attributed to the action of vip3Aa1 released from ingested conidia (Qin et al., 2010).
To confirm further the per os insecticidal activity of the expressed vip3Aa1 to S. litura larvae, glass tubes filled with the concentrated conidial suspension (10 8 conidia per millilitre) of each fungal strain were exposed to water bath at 42°C for 3 h to inactivate the conidia in the suspension. After the exposure, conidial viability in each suspension was evaluated using three 100 ml samples, which were spread onto SDAY plates for 24 h germination at 25°C. Each heat-treated suspension was sprayed onto lotus leaf discs for ingestion by the second-instar larvae of S. litura using the same method as above.
All time-mortality observations from the bioassays were analysed using the Probit Procedure in DPS software (Tang and Feng, 2007), generating LT50 estimates and associated 95% CIs as virulence indices of the tested fungal strains against S. litura larvae.