JGV logo Journal of General Virology

First posted online 30 June 2000 ARTICLE ABSTRACT
Rec 17 March 2000; Acc 19 June 2000 DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.17048-0

Isolation of a Spodoptera exigua baculovirus recombinant with a 10.6 kbp genome deletion that retains biological activity

Xiaojiang Dai,1,2 József P. Hajós,1,3 Nina N. Joosten,1 Monique M. van Oers,1 Wilfred F. J. IJkel,1 Douwe Zuidema,1 Yi Pang2 and Just M. Vlak1

1 Laboratory of Virology, Wageningen University and Research Centre, Binnenhaven 11, 6709 PD Wageningen, The Netherlands
2 State Key Laboratory for Biocontrol and Institute of Entomology, Zhongshan University, Guangzhou 510275, People's Republic of China
3 Institute of Enzymology, Biological Research Centre, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, PO Box 7, 1518 Budapest, Hungary


When Spodoptera exigua multicapsid nucleopolyhedrovirus (SeMNPV) is grown in insect cell culture, defective viruses are generated. These viruses lack about 25 kbp of sequence information and are no longer infectious for insects. This makes the engineering of SeMNPV for improved insecticidal activity or as expression vectors difficult to achieve. Recombinants of Autographa californica MNPV have been generated in insects after lipofection with viral DNA and a transfer vector into the haemocoel. In the present study a novel procedure to isolate SeMNPV recombinants was adopted by alternate cloning between insect larvae and cultured cells. The S. exigua cell line Se301 was used to select the putative recombinants by following a green fluorescent protein marker inserted in the p10 locus of SeMNPV. Polyhedra from individual plaques were fed to larvae to select for biological activity. In this way an SeMNPV recombinant (SeXD1) was obtained with the speed of kill improved by about 25 %. This recombinant lacked 10593 bp of sequence information, located between 13.7 and 21.6 map units of SeMNPV and including ecdysteroid UDP glucosyl transferase, gp37, chitinase and cathepsin genes, as well as several genes unique to SeMNPV. The result indicated, however, that these genes are dispensable for virus replication both in vitro and in vivo. A mutant with a similar deletion was identified by PCR in the parental wild-type SeMNPV isolate, suggesting that genotypes with differential biological activities exist in field isolates of baculoviruses. The generation of recombinants in vivo, combined with the alternate cloning between insects and insect cells, is likely to be applicable to many baculovirus species in order to obtain biologically active recombinants.

Get textClick here for full text HTML

UpJGV Direct table of contents

© 2000 SGM

This article is now available in the October 2000 print issue of JGV (vol. 81, 2545-2554). The complete issue of the journal may be seen in electronic form on JGV Online.