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Title:
NEW BACILLUS THURINGIENSIS STRAINS AND THEIR INSECTICIDAL PROTEINS
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/1994/005771
Kind Code:
A2
Abstract:
Four novel Bacillus thuringiensis strains, which are deposited at the BCCM-LMG under accession nos. LMG P-12592, LMG P-12593, LMG P-12594, and LMG P-13493, produce new crystal proteins during sporulation that are toxic to Lepidoptera, more particularly against Noctuidae such as Spodoptera spp. and Agrotis ipsilon, against Pyralidae such as Ostrinia nubilalis, and against Yponomeutidae such as Plutella xylostella, and that are encoded by a novel gene. The crystal proteins contain protoxins, which can yield a toxin as trypsin-digestion product. A plant, the genome of which is transformed with a DNA sequence that comes from either one of the strains and that encodes its respective toxin, is resistant to Lepidoptera. Each strain, itself, or its crystals, crystal proteins, protoxin or toxin can be used as the active ingredient in an insecticidal composition for combatting Lepidoptera.

Inventors:
LAMBERT BART (BE)
JANSENS STEFAN (BE)
AUDENHOVE KATRIEN VAN (BE)
PEFEROEN MARNIX (BE)
Application Number:
PCT/EP1993/001820
Publication Date:
March 17, 1994
Filing Date:
July 12, 1993
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
PLANT GENETIC SYSTEMS NV (BE)
LAMBERT BART (BE)
JANSENS STEFAN (BE)
AUDENHOVE KATRIEN VAN (BE)
PEFEROEN MARNIX (BE)
International Classes:
A01H5/00; A01M1/20; A01N63/50; C07K14/325; C12N1/20; C12N1/21; C12N5/04; C12N5/10; C12N15/09; C12N15/32; C12N15/82; C12R1/07; (IPC1-7): C12N1/20; C12N15/32; C12N5/04; C12N5/10; A01N5/00; A01N5/10; C12R1/07
Domestic Patent References:
WO1993004587A11993-03-18
WO1990006999A11990-06-28
Foreign References:
EP0498537A21992-08-12
EP0358557A21990-03-14
Other References:
JOURNAL OF GENERAL MICROBIOLOGY, vol.138, 1992, LONDON pages 55 - 62 GLEAVE ET AL. 'Identification of an insecticidal crystal protein ....' cited in the application
FEBS LETTERS, vol.293, no.1,2, 18 November 1991, AMSTERDAM pages 25 - 28 SMULEVITCH ET AL. 'Nucleotide sequence of a novel ....' cited in the application
NATURE, vol.328, no.6125, 2 July 1987, LONDON pages 33 - 37 VAECK ET AL. 'Transgenic plants protected from insect attack' cited in the application
MICROBIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, vol.53, no.2, June 1989, WASHINGTON, DC pages 242 - 255 H\FTE ET AL. 'Insecticidal crystal proteins of Bacillus thuringiensis' cited in the application
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Claims:
Claims
1. The BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain or its equivalent.
2. The BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E crystals or crystal proteins or their equivalents.
3. The BTS02618A protoxin and insecticidally effective protoxin portions particularly the toxin, or the equivalent thereof.
4. The bTS02618A gene, the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, the truncated bTS02618A gene, the bTS02618A chimeric gene or an equivalent thereof or a hybrid thereof with a selectable marker gene, such as the neo gene, particularly wherein said bTS02618A gene is derived from the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain and hybridizes to the DNA probe of SEQ ID No. 1, especially wherein said bTS02618A gene contains the nucleotide sequences shown in SEQ ID Nos. 2 and 3, more particularly the bTS02618A gene of SEQ ID No. 4.
5. A DNA sequence encoding the BTS02618A protoxin of SEQ ID No.4, preferably insecticidally effective BTS02618A protoxin portions, particularly the BTS02618A toxin.
6. An insecticidal composition, particularly against Lepidoptera, more particularly against Noctuidae, especially Agrotis spp., Spodoptera spp., Plutella spp., Mamestra spp. , Heliothis spp. and Ostrinia spp. ; said composition comprising an active ingredient selected from the group consisting of: the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains, crystals and crystal proteins, the BTS02618A protoxin and insecticidally effective BTS02618A protoxin portions, particularly the BTS02618A toxin, and equivalents thereof.
7. A transformed microorganism, particularly B. thuringiensis. characterized by the bTS02618A gene, gene part, truncated gene, chimeric gene or hybrid of claim 4.
8. A transformed plant cell, characterized by the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, the truncated bTS02618A gene, the bTS02618A chimeric gene, or a hybrid thereof with a selectable marker gene, such as the neo gene.
9. A plant or a seed thereof comprising a plurality of the plant cells of claim 8.
10. A plant genome containing, integrated therein, the bTS02618A gene part, truncated gene, chimeric gene or hybrid of claim 8.
11. A plant tissue, the cells of which have the plant genome of claim 10.
12. A process for rendering a plant resistant to Lepidoptera, particularly Noctuidae such as Spodoptera spp. and Agrotis spp. , Pyralidae such as O. nubilalis. and Yponomeutidae such as Plutella xylostella. characterized by: providing the plant with the plant genome of claim 10.
13. A process for producing plants and reproduction material, such as seeds, of said plants including a heterologous genetic material stably integrated in the genome thereof and capable of being expressed therein in the form of a protein toxic to insects, comprising the nonbiological steps of: a) producing transformed plant cells or plant tissue including said heterologous genetic material from starting plant cells or plant tissue not expressing said protein, b) producing regenerated plants or reproduction material of said plants or both from said transformed plant cells or plant tissue including said heterologous genetic material, and c) optionally, biologically replicating said regenerated plants or reproduction material or both; wherein said step of producing said transformed plant cells or plant tissue including said heterologous genetic material is characterized by transforming said starting plant cells or plant tissue with the bTS02618A gene part, truncated gene or hybrid of claim 8 as well as regulatory elements which are capable of enabling the expression of the gene part, the truncated gene or the hybrid in said plant cells or plant tissue, to cause the stable integration of the gene part, the truncated gene or the hybrid in transformed plant cells or plant tissue, as well as in said plants and reproduction material produced therefrom throughout generations.
14. A process for controlling an insect pest, especially Lepidoptera, particularly Noctuidae, Pyralidae and Yponomeutidae, more particularly Spodoptera spp., Mamestra spp. , Heliothis spp. , Ostrinia spp. , Plutella spp. and Agrotis spp., quite particularly Agrotis ipsilon. Spodoptera exigua. Spodoptera littoralis. Spodoptera frugiperda. Mamestra brassica. Heliothis virescens. Ostrinia nubilalis and Plutella xylostella; said process being characterized by the step of contacting the pest with the BTS02618A protoxin or BTS02618A toxin, preferably the insecticidal composition of claim 6.
Description:
NEW BACILLUS THURINGIENSIS STRAINS AND THEIR INSECTICIDAL PROTEINS

This invention relates to four novel strains of Bacillus thurinσiensis (the "BTS02617A strain", the "BTS02618A strain", the "BTS02654B strain" and the "BTS02652E strain"), each of which produces crystallized proteins (the "BTS02617A crystal proteins", the "BTS02618A crystal proteins", the "BTS02654B crystal proteins" and the "BTS02652E crystal proteins", respectively) which are packaged in crystals (the "BTS02617A crystals", the "BTS02618A crystals", the "BTS02654B crystals" and the "BTS02652E crystals", respectively) during sporulation. The BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains were deposited under the provisions of the Budapest Treaty at the Belgian Coordinated Collections of Microorganisms - Collection Laboratorium voor Microbiologie Belgium ("BCCM-LMG") , R.U.G., K. Ledeganckstraat 35, B-9000 Gent.

This invention also relates to an insecticide composition that is active against Lepidoptera and that comprises the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, as such, or preferably the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E crystals, crystal proteins or the active component(s) thereof as an active ingredient.

This invention further relates to a gene (the "bTS02618A gene") , which is present in the genome of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains and which encodes an insecticidal protein (the "BTS02618A protoxin") that is found in the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E crystals. The BTS02618A protoxin is the protein that is produced by the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains before being packaged into their respective BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E crystals.

This invention still further relates to a toxin (the "BTS02618A toxin") which can be obtained (e.g., by trypsin digestion) from the BTS02618A protoxin. The BTS02618A toxin is an insecticidally active protein which can be liberated from

the BTS02617A crystals, the BTS02618A crystals, the BTS02654B crystals, and the BTS02652E crystals, which are produced by the

BTS02617A strain, the BTS02618A strain, the BTS02654B strain and the BTS02652E strain, respectively. This toxin and its protoxin have a high activity against a wide range of lepidopteran insects, particularly against Noctuidae, especially against Spodoptera and Agrotis spp., but also against other important lepidopteran insects such as Pyralidae, particularly the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis. and Yponomeutidae such as Plutella xylostella. This new characteristic of the BTS02618A protoxin and toxin

(" (pro)toxin") , i.e., the combination of activity against different economically important Lepidopteran insect families such as Noctuidae, Yponomeutidae and Pyralidae, makes this (pro)toxin an ideally suited compound for combatting a wide range of insect pests by contacting these insects with the

(pro)toxin, e.g., by spraying or by expressing the bTS02618A gene in plant-associated bacteria or in plants. The BTS02618A toxin is believed to represent the smallest portion of the BTS02618A protoxin which is insecticidally effective against

Lepidoptera.

This invention yet further relates to a chimeric gene that can be used to transform a plant cell and that contains the following operably linked DNA fragments: 1) a part of the bTS02618A gene (the "insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part") encoding an insecticidally effective portion of the BTS02618A protoxin, preferably a truncated part of the bTS02618A gene (the "truncated bTS02618A gene") encoding just the BTS02618A toxin; 2) a promoter suitable for transcription of the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part in a plant cell; and

3) suitable 3' end transcript formation and polyadenylation signals for expressing the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part in a plant cell.

This chimeric gene is hereinafter generally referred to as the "bTS02618A chimeric gene".

This invention also relates to:

1) a cell (the "transformed plant cell") of a plant, such as corn or cotton, the genome of which is transformed with the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, preferably the bTS02618A chimeric gene; and

2) a plant (the "transformed plant") which is regenerated from the transformed plant cell or is produced from the so-regenerated plant and their seeds, the genome of which contains the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, preferably the bTS02618A chimeric gene, and which is resistant to Lepidoptera.

This invention still further relates to :

1) a microbial organism, such as B. thurincriensis or Pseudomonas spp. , the genome of which is transformed with all or part of the bTS02618A gene; and

2) a microbial spore, containing a genome which is transformed with all or parts of the bTS02618A gene.

Background of the Invention

B. thurinαiensis ("Bt") is a Gram-positive bacterium which produces endogenous crystals upon sporulation. The crystals are composed of proteins which are specifically toxic against insect larvae. These crystal proteins and corresponding genes have been classified based on their structure and insecticidal spectrum (Hόfte and Whiteley, 1989) . The four major classes are Lepidoptera-specific (cryl) , Lepidoptera- and Diptera- specific (cryll) , Coleoptera-specific (crylll) , and Diptera- specific (cryIV) genes. The fact that conventional submerged fermentation techniques can be used to produce Bt spores on a large scale makes Bt bacteria commercially attractive as a source of insecticidal compositions.

Gene fragments from some Bt strains, encoding insecticidal proteins, have heretofore been identified and integrated into plant genomes in order to render the plants insect-resistant. However, obtaining expression of such Bt gene fragments in

plants is not a straightforward process. In order to achieve optimal expression of an insecticidal protein in plant cells, it has been found necessary to engineer each Bt gene fragment in a specific way so that it encodes a part of a Bt protoxin that retains substantial toxicity against its target insects (European patent application ("EPA") 86/300,291.1 and 88/402,115.5; U.S. patent application 821,582, filed January 22, 1986).

summary of the Invention

In accordance with this invention, four novel Bt strains, i.e., the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains, are provided. The BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E crystals and crystal proteins, the BTS02618A protoxin and toxin produced by the strains during sporulation, and insecticidally effective portions of the BTS02618A protoxin, as well as equivalents of these crystals, crystal proteins, protoxin, toxin and insecticidally effective protoxin portions, each possess insecticidal activity and can therefore be formulated into insecticidal compositions against Lepidoptera in general, and particularly against Noctuidae, such as Aαrotis spp. (cutworms such as Aqrotis ipsilon) . Mamestra spp. (e.g., the cabbage moth, Mamestra brassica) and Spodoptera spp. (armyworms, such as Spodoptera exiqua. Spodoptera fru iperda. Spodoptera littoralis and Spodoptera litura) , against Pyralidae (e.g., the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis) and Yponomeutidae (such as Plutella xylostella) which are major pests of various economically important crops, such as corn, cotton and many vegetables such as Brassicas.

Also in accordance with this invention, a plant cell genome is transformed with the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, preferably the truncated bTS02618A gene, or an equivalent thereof such as a modified, synthetic bTS02618A gene. It is preferred that this transformation be carried out with the bTS02618A chimeric gene. The resulting transformed plant cell can be used to produce transformed

plants, seeds of transformed plants and plant cell cultures consisting essentially of the transformed cells. The transformed cells in some or all of the tissues of the transformed plants: 1) contain the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part as a stable insert in their genome, and 2) express the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part by producing an insecticidally effective portion of its BTS02618A protoxin, preferably its BTS02618A toxin, thereby rendering the plant resistant to Lepidoptera. The transformed plant cells of this invention can also be used to produce, for recovery, such insecticidal Bt proteins.

Further in accordance with this invention, a process is provided for rendering a plant resistant to Lepidoptera by transforming the plant cell genome with the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, preferably the truncated bTS02618A gene, or an equivalent thereof. In this regard, it is preferred that the plant cell be transformed with the bTS02618A chimeric gene.

Yet further in accordance with this invention, there are provided the BTS02618A protoxin, the insecticidally effective portions of such protoxin and the BTS02618A toxin, as well as functional parts of the BTS02618A toxin, as well as the bTS02618A gene, the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, the truncated bTS02618A gene and the chimeric bTS02618A gene, as well as their equivalents.

Also in accordance with this invention, a DNA sequence, either natural or artificial, encoding the BTS02618A protoxin or insecticidally effective portions thereof, such as the toxin, is provided. Also in accordance with this invention are provided an insecticidal composition against Lepidoptera, particularly Noctuidae, Pyralidae and Yponomeutidae, and a method for controlling Lepidoptera, particularly Noctuidae, Pyralidae and Yponomeutidae, with the insecticidal composition, wherein the insecticidal composition comprises the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, crystals and/or crystal proteins or the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin and/or insecticidally

effective protoxin portions or their equivalents.

Detailed Description of the Invention

The BTS02618A protoxin of this invention can be isolated in a conventional manner from the BTS02617A strain, deposited on July, 2 at the BCCM-LMG under accession number LMG P-12592, the BTS02618A strain, deposited on July 2, 1992 at the BCCM-LMG under accession number LMG P-12593, the BTS02654B strain, deposited on July 2, 1992 at the BCCM-LMG under accession number LMG P-12594, or the BTS02652E strain deposited on March 1, 1993 at the BCCM-LMG under accession number LMG P-13493. For example, the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E crystals can be isolated from sporulated cultures of their respective strain (Mahillon and Delcour, 1984) , and then, the BTS02618A protoxin can be isolated from the crystals according to the method of Hόfte et al. (1986) . The protoxins can be used to prepare monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies specific for the protoxin in a conventional manner (Hόfte et al., 1988). The BTS02618A toxin can be obtained by protease (e.g., trypsin) digestion of the BTS02618A protoxin.

The bTS02618A gene can be isolated in a conventional manner. The bTS02618A gene can be identified in the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, using the procedure described in U.S. Patent Application 821,582, filed January 22, 1986, and in EPA 86/300,291.1 and 88/402,115.5 (which are incorporated herein by reference) . The bTS02618A gene was identified by: digesting total DNA from one of the above strains with restriction enzymes; size fractionating the DNA fragments, so produced, into DNA fractions of 5 to 10 Kb; ligating these fractions to cloning vectors; screening the E. coli, transformed with the cloning vectors, with a DNA probe that was constructed from a region of the crvIG gene (Smulevitch et al., 1991; Gleave et al. , 1992). The term "bTS02618A gene" as used herein includes a DNA sequence encoding the BTS02618A protoxin or toxin or functionally equivalent variants thereof. Indeed, because of

the degeneracy of the genetic code, some amino acid codons can be replaced with others without changing the amino acid sequence of the protein. Furthermore, some amino acids can be substituted by other equivalent amino acids without significantly changing the insecticidal activity of the protein. Also, changes in amino acid composition in regions of the molecule, different from those responsible for binding and toxicity are less likely to cause a difference in insecticidal activity of the protein. Such equivalents of the gene include DNA sequences hybridizing to the DNA sequence of the BTS02618A toxin or protoxin of SEQ ID. No. 4 and encoding a protein with the same insecticidal characteristics as the BTS02618A (pro)toxin, of this invention. In this context, the term "hybridization" refers to conventional hybridization conditions, most preferably stringent hybridization conditions.

The term "functional parts of the BTS02618A toxin" as used herein means any part(s) or domain(s) of the toxin with a specific structure that can be transferred to another (Bt) protein for providing a new hybrid protein with at least one functional characteristic (e.g. , the binding and/or toxicity characteristics) of the BTS02618A toxin (Ge et al. , 1991) . Such parts can form an essential feature of the hybrid Bt protein with the binding and/or toxicity characteristics of the BTS02618A protein. Such a hybrid protein can have an enlarged host range, an improved toxicity and/or can be used in a strategy to prevent insect resistance development (European Patent Publication ("EP") 408 403; Visser et al., 1993).

Alternatively, the 5 to 10 Kb fragments, prepared from total DNA of the BTS02617A or BTS02618A or BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, can be ligated in suitable expression vectors and transformed in E. coli. and the clones can then be screened by conventional colony immunoprobing methods (French et al., 1986) for expression of the toxin with monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies raised against the BTS02618A toxin. Also, the 5 to 10 Kb fragments, prepared from total DNA of the BTS02617A or BTS02618A or BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, can be ligated in suitable Bt shuttle vectors (Lereclus et al.,

1992) and transformed in a crystal minus Bt-mutant. The clones are then screened for production of crystals (detected by microscopy) or crystal proteins (detected by SDS-PAGE) .

The so-identified bTS02618A gene was sequenced in a conventional manner (Maxam and Gilbert, 1980) to obtain the DNA sequence. Hybridization in Southern blots and sequence comparison indicated that this gene is different from previously described genes encoding protoxins and toxins with activity against Lepidoptera (Hofte and Whiteley, 1989) . An insecticidally effective part of the bTS02618A gene, encoding an insecticidally effective portion of its protoxin, and a truncated part of the gene,- encoding just its toxin, can be made in a conventional manner after sequence analysis of the gene. The amino acid sequence of the BTS02618A protoxin and toxin was determined from the DNA sequence of the bTS02618A gene and the truncated bTS02618A gene. By "an insecticidally effective part" or "a part" of the bTS02618A gene is meant a DNA sequence encoding a polypeptide which has fewer amino acids than the BTS02618A protoxin but which is still toxic to Lepidoptera.

In order to express all or an insecticidally effective part of the bTS026l8A gene or an equivalent gene in E. coli, in other Bt strains and irf plants, suitable restriction sites can be introduced, flanking each gene or gene part. This can be done by site-directed mutagenesis, using well-known procedures (Stanssens et al., 1989; White et al., 1989). In order to obtain improved expression in plants, it may be preferred to modify the codon usage of the bTS02618A gene or insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part to form an equivalent, modified or artificial gene or gene part in accordance with PCT publications WO 91/16432 and WO 93/09218; EP 0,358,962 and EP 0,359,472. For obtaining enhanced expression in monocot plants such as corn, a monocot intron also can be added to the bTS02618A chimeric gene, and the DNA sequence of the bTS02618A gene part can be further changed in a translationally neutral manner, to modify possibly inhibiting DNA sequences present in the gene part by means of site-

directed intron insertion and/or by introducing changes to the codon usage, e.g. , adapting the codon usage to that most preferred by the specific plant (Murray et al., 1989) without changing significantly the encoded amino acid sequence. The insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part or its equivalent, preferably the bTS02618A chimeric gene, encoding an insecticidally effective portion of the BTS02618A protoxin, can be stably inserted in a conventional manner into the nuclear genome of a single plant cell, and the so-transformed plant cell can be used in a conventional manner to produce a transformed plant that is insect-resistant. In this regard, a disarmed Ti-plasmid, containing the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, in Agrobacterium tumefaciens can be used to transform the plant cell, and thereafter, a transformed plant can be regenerated from the transformed plant cell using the procedures described, for example, in EP 0,116,718, EP 0,270,822, PCT publication WO 84/02,913 and European Patent Application ("EPA") 87/400,544.0 (which are also incorporated herein by reference), and in Gould et al. (1991). Preferred Ti-plasmid vectors each contain the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part between the border sequences, or at least located to the left of the right border sequence, of the T-DNA of the Ti-plasmid. Of course, other types of vectors can be used to transform the plant cell, using procedures such as direct gene transfer (as described, for example in EP 0,233,247), pollen mediated transformation (as described, for example in EP 0,270,356, PCT publication WO 85/01856, and US Patent 4,684,611), plant RNA virus-mediated transformation (as described, for example in EP 0,067,553 and US Patent 4,407,956), liposome-mediated transformation (as described, for example in US Patent 4,536,475), and other methods such as the recently described methods for transforming certain lines of corn (Fromm et al., 1990 ; Gordon-Kamm et al., 1990) and rice (Shimamoto et al., 1989; Datta et al. , 1990) and the recently described method for transforming monocots generally (PCT publication WO 92/09696) .

The resulting transformed plant can be used in a

conventional plant breeding scheme to produce more transformed plants with the same characteristics or to introduce the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part in other varieties of the same or related plant species. Seeds, which are obtained from the transformed plants, contain the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part as a stable genomic insert. Cells of the transformed plant can be cultured in a conventional manner to produce the insecticidally effective portion of the BTS02618A protoxin, preferably the BTS02618A toxin, which can be recovered for use in conventional insecticide compositions against Lepidoptera (U.S. Patent Application 821,582; EPA 86/300291.1.) .

The insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part, preferably the truncated bTS02618A gene, is inserted in a plant cell genome so that the inserted gene is downstream (i.e., 3 1 ) of, and under the control of, a promoter which can direct the expression of the gene part in the plant cell. This is preferably accomplished by inserting the bTS02618A chimeric gene in the plant cell genome. Preferred promoters include: the strong constitutive 35S promoters (the "35S promoters") of the cauliflower mosaic virus of isolates CM 1841 (Gardner et al., 1981), CabbB-S (Franck et al. , 1980) and CabbB-JI (Hull and Howell, 1987) ; and the TR1' promoter and the TR2' promoter (the "TR1' promoter" and "TR2 ' promoter", respectively) which drive the expression of the 1' and 2' genes, respectively, of the T-DNA (Velten et al., 1984). Alternatively, a promoter can be utilized which is not constitutive but rather is specific for one or more tissues or organs of the plant (e.g., leaves and/or roots) whereby the inserted bTS02618A gene part is expressed only in cells of the specific tissue(s) or organ(ε) . For example, the insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part could be selectively expressed in the leaves of a plant (e.g. , corn, cotton) by placing the insecticidally effective gene part under the control of a light-inducible promoter such as the promoter of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase small subunit gene of the plant itself or of another plant such as pea as disclosed in U.S. Patent Application 821,582 and EPA

86/300,291.1. Another alternative is to use a promoter whose expression is inducible (e.g., by temperature or chemical factors) .

The insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part is inserted in the plant genome so that the inserted gene part is upstream (i.e., 5') of suitable 3' end transcription regulation signals (i.e., transcript formation and polyadenylation signals) . This is preferably accomplished by inserting the bTS02618A chimeric gene in the plant cell genome. Preferred polyadenylation and transcript formation signals include those of the octopine synthase gene (Gielen et al., 1984) and the T-DNA gene 7 (Velten and Schell, 1985), which act as 3 '-untranslated DNA sequences in transformed plant cells.

The insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part can optionally be inserted in the plant genome as a hybrid gene (EPA 86/300,291.1; Vaeck et al., 1987) under the control of the same promoter as a selectable marker gene, such as the neo gene (EP 0,242,236) encoding kanamycin resistance, so that the plant expresses a fusion protein. All or part of the bTS02618A gene, encoding an anti- lepidopteran protein, can also be used to transform other bacteria, such as a B. thuringiensis which has insecticidal activity against Lepidoptera or Coleoptera. Thereby, a transformed Bt strain can be produced which is useful for combatting a wide spectrum of lepidopteran and coleopteran insect pests or for combatting additional lepidopteran insect pests. Transformation of bacteria with all or part of the bTS02618A gene, incorporated in a suitable cloning vehicle, can be carried out in a conventional manner, preferably using conventional electroporation techniques as described in Mahillon et al. (1989) and in PCT Patent publication WO 90/06999.

The BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain also can be transformed with all or an insecticidally effective part of one or more foreign Bt genes such as: the btlδ gene (EP 0,358,557) or another Bt gene coding for an anti-Lepidoptera protein; and the bt!09P gene (PCT publication WO 91/16433),

coding for an an i-Coleoptera protein. Thereby, a transformed Bt strain can be produced which is useful for combatting an even greater variety of insect pests (e.g., Coleoptera and/or additional Lepidoptera) . Transformation of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or

BTS02652E strain with all or part of a foreign Bt gene, incorporated in a conventional cloning vector, can be carried out in a well known manner, preferably using conventional electroporation techniques (Chassy et al., 1988) or other methods, e.g., as described by Lereclus et al. (1992).

Each of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strains can be fermented by conventional methods (Dulmage, 1981; Bernhard and Utz, 1993) to provide high yields of cells. Under appropriate conditions which are well understood (Dulmage, 1981) , the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains each sporulate to produce crystal proteins containing the BTS02168A protoxin in high yields.

An insecticidal, particularly anti-lepidopteran, composition of this invention can be formulated in a conventional manner using the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain or preferably their respective crystals, crystal proteins or the BTS02168A protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portion as an active ingredient, together with suitable carriers, diluents, emulsifiers and/or dispersantε (e.g., as described by Bernhard and Utz, 1993) . This insecticide composition can be formulated as a wettable powder, pellets, granules or dust or as a liquid formulation with aqueous or non-aqueous solvents as a foam, gel, suspension, concentrate, etc. The concentration of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, crystals, crystal proteins, or the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portions in such a composition will depend upon the nature of the formulation and its intended mode of use. Generally, an insecticide composition of this invention can be used to protect a field for 2 to 4 weeks against Lepidoptera with each application of the composition. For more extended protection (e.g. , for a whole

growing season) , additional amounts of the composition should be applied periodically.

A method for controlling insects, particularly Lepidoptera, in accordance with this invention preferably comprises applying (e.g., spraying), to a locus (area) to be protected, an insecticidal amount of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain, spores, crystals, crystal proteins or the BTS02168A protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portions, preferably the BTS2168A toxin. The locus to be protected can include, for example, the habitat of the insect pests or growing vegetation or an area where vegetation is to be grown.

To obtain the BTS02618A protoxin or toxin, cells of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain can be grown in a conventional manner on a suitable culture medium and then lysed using conventional means such as enzymatic degradation or detergents or the like. The protoxin can then be separated and purified by standard techniques such as chromatography, extraction, electrophoresis, or the like. The toxin can then be obtained by trypsin digestion of the protoxin.

The BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E cells can also be harvested and then applied intact, either alive or dead, preferably dried, to the locus to be protected. In this regard, it is preferred that a purified BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain (either alive or dead) be used, particularly a cell mass that is 90.0 to 99.9 % of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain.

The BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B, or BTS02652E cells, crystals or crystal proteins or the BTS02618 protoxin, toxin, or insecticidally effective protoxin portion can be formulated in an insecticidal composition in a variety of ways, using any number of conventional additives, wet or dry, depending upon the particular use. Additives can include wetting agents, detergents, stabilizers, adhering agents, spreading agents and extenders. Examples of such a composition include pastes, dusting powders, wettable powders, granules, baits and aerosol

sprays. Other Bt cells, crystals, crystal proteins, protoxins, toxins, and insecticidally effective protoxin portions and other insecticides, as well as fungicides, biocides, herbicides and fertilizers, can be employed along with the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E cells, crystals or crystal proteins or the BTS02618 protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portions to provide additional advantages or benefits. Such an insecticidal composition can be prepared in a conventional manner, and the amount of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E cells, crystals or crystal proteins or the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin or insecticidally effective protoxin portion employed depends upon a variety of factors, such as the insect pest targeted, the composition used, the type of area to which the composition is to be applied, and the prevailing weather conditions. Generally, the concentration of the BTS02618A protoxin, insecticidally effective protoxin portions or toxin will be at least about 0.1% by weight of the formulation to about 100% by weight of the formulation, more often from about 0.15% to about 0.8% by weight of the formulation.

In practice, some insects can be fed the BTS02618A protoxin, toxin, insecticidally effective protoxin portion or mixtures thereof in the protected area, that is in the area where such protoxin, toxin and/or insecticidally effective protoxin portion has been applied. Alternatively, some insects can be fed intact and alive cells of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain or transformants thereof, so that the insects ingest some of the strain's protoxin and suffer death or damage.

The following Examples illustrate the invention. The figure and the sequence listing referred to in the Examples are as follows:

Figure 1

Southern blot analysis of Alul-digested total DNA of Bt strain HD127 (lane 1), the BTS02618A strain (lane 2), Bt strain

BTS02459 (containing crvIA(c) . 81k, crylC en crylE. lane 3) , and Bt strain BTS02480E (containing the same genes as HD-127, lane 4) , using a mixture of DNA-probes for cryl crystal protein genes, including the crylG probe (SEQ ID no. 1) . Each band corresponds to a particular crystal protein gene. With these probes, the BTS02618A strain is found to contain the crvIA(b) gene and a novel gene, which is the bTS02618A gene, identified by an Alul fragment of approximately 530 bp, hybridizing to the crvIG probe of SEQ ID no. 1. The names of the recognized cryl genes are indicated, as well as the size of some fragments. The bTS02618A gene is indicated with three asterisks; "?" indicates an unknown gene fragment.

Sequence Listing SEQ ID No. 1 - Nucleotide sequence of the DNA probe used to isolate the bTS02618A gene. This probe is derived from part of the crylG DNA sequence and is complementary to nucleotides 2732-2750 of the DNA sequence described by Smulevitch et al. (1991). SEQ ID No. 2 - The 5' partial nucleotide sequence of the bTS02618A gene, comprising the presumptive translation initiation codon at nucleotide position 195-197.

SEQ ID No. 3 - The 3 1 partial nucleotide sequence of the bTS02618A gene (N: unknown nucleotide) , comprising the presumptive translational stop codon at nucleotide position 1146-1148.

SEQ ID No. 4 - The nucleotide sequence of the bTS02618A gene and the translated amino acid sequence of the BTS02618A protoxin. The open reading frame of the protoxin reaches from nucleotide 668 to nucleotide 4141. The translation initiation codon is at nucleotide position 668-670, the translation stop codon is at nucleotide position 4139- 4141.

Unless otherwise stated in the Examples, all procedures for making and manipulating recombinant DNA are carried out by the standardized procedures described in Sambrook et al.,

Molecular Cloning - A Laboratory Manual. Second Ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, NY (1989) .

Example 1: Characterization of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A. BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains.

The BTS02617A, the BTS02618A and the BTS02654B strain were isolated from grain dust sampled in Cadlan, province of Bicol, The Philippines and were deposited at the BCCM-LMG on July 2, 1992 under accession Nos. LMG P-12592, LMG P-12593 and LMG P- 12594, respectively. Strain BTS02652E was also isolated from Philippine grain dust, and was deposited at the BCCM-LMG on March, 1, 1993 under accession No. LMG P-13493.

Each strain can be cultivated on conventional standard media, preferably T 3 medium (tryptone 3 g/1, tryptose 2 g/1, yeast extract 1.5 g/1, 5 mg MnCl 2 , 0.05 M Na 2 P0 6 , pH 6.8 and 1.5% agar) , preferably at 28°C. For long term storage, it is preferred to mix an equal volume of a spore-crystal suspension with an equal volume of 50% glycerol and store this at -70°C or lyophilize a spore-crystal suspension. For sporulation, growth on T 3 medium is preferred for 48 hours at 28°C, followed by storage at 4°C. During its vegetative phase, each of the strains can also grow under facultative anaerobic conditions, but sporulation only occurs under aerobic conditions. Sterilization of each strain occurs by autoclave treatment at 120°C (1 bar pressure) for 20 minutes. Such treatment totally inactivates the spores and the BTS02617A,BTS02618A, BTS02654B, and BTS02652E protoxins. UV radiation (254 nm) also inactivates the spores. After cultivating on Nutrient Agar ("NA", Difco

Laboratories, Detroit, MI, USA) for one day, colonies of each of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains form opaque white colonies with irregular edges. Cells of each strain (Gram positive rods of 1.7-2.4 x 5.6-7.7 μm) sporulate after 48 hrs cultivation at 28"C on T 3 agar. The crystal proteins produced during sporulation are packaged in crystals of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B, and BTS02652E strains.

Quite remarkably, the crystal remains attached to the spore after sporulation.

The Bt serotype of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02645B and

BTS02652E strains was determined to be serotype tolworthi H9 of all these strains which was determined by conventional serotyping methods as conducted by the WHO Collaborating Center for Entomopathogenic Bacillus.

Example 2 : Insecticidal activity of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A. BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains and the BTS02618A protoxin against Noctuidae spp.. Yponomeutidae spp. and Pyralidae spp.

Toxicity assays were performed on neonate larvae (for Plutella xylostella. third instar larvae were used) fed on an artificial diet layered with spore-crystal mixtures from one of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains or the BTS02618A protoxin or toxin. The artificial diet was dispensed in wells of Costar 24-well plates. Formaldehyde was omitted from the diet. 50 μl of a sample dilution was applied on the surface of the diet and dried in a laminar air flow. For LC 50 assays, the dilutions were made in a PBS-BSA buffer, and five dilutions were applied. Two larvae were placed in each well and 24 larvae were used per sample dilution. Dead and living M. brassica. S. frugiperda, H. virescens, O. nubilalis, Plutella xylostella and S. exigua larvae were counted on the fifth day, and dead and living A. ipsilon and S. littoralis larvae were counted on the sixth day. The LC 50 and LC 95 values (the concentrations required to kill respectively 50% or 95% of the insects tested, expressed in number of spore- crystals/cm 2 or ng (pro)toxin/cm 2 ) were calculated using Probit- analysis (Finney, 1971) , and the results are set forth below.

Spodoptera littoralis

- 10 spore-crystals per cm b 95 % fiducial limits of LC 50 values c from the Howard Dulmage collection, housed at the Northern

Region Research Center, 1815 North University, Peoria, 111,

USA. The curator is Dr. L.Nakamura.

Experiments with purified BTS02618A protoxin also show a significant toxicity of this protoxin against S. littoralis larvae.

Spodoptera exiqua

1. Crystal/spore mixtures

a 10 5 spore-crystals per cm 2 b 95 % fiducial limits of LC 50 values, values marked with * are 90 % fiducial limits of LC 50 values c PCT patent publication WO 90/06999 d strain isolated from Javelin ® (Sandoz, Lichtstrasse, Basel,

Switzerland) e strain from Florbac ® (Novo Nordisk, Novo Alle, Bagsvaerd, Denmark)

2.Toxin/protoxin assays.

a ng/cm 2 b 95 % fiducial limits of LC 50 values

Mamestra brassica

1. Crystal/spore mixtures.

a 10 5 spore-crystals per cm 2 b 95 % fiducial limits of LC 50 values

a ng/cm 2 b 95 % fiducial limits of LC 50 values

Agrotis ipsilon

1.Crystal/spore mixtures.

genes" crvIF. crylG. cryll. 81k crvIAa. crylAb. crvIC, crylD, cryll. 81k crvIAb. cryll. bTS02618A none

a number of 1st instar larvae killed after 6 days (10 7 spore- crystals per cm 2 ) b genes known to be present in these strains c Btgall. as described by Smulevitch et al (1991) d HD127 is available at the Howard Dulmage Collection (NRRC, see above) e surviving larvae show severe growth-inhibition

a 10 6 spores/cur b 95 % fiducial limits of LC 50 values

2. Toxin/protoxin assay.

a ng/cm 2 b 95 % fiducial limits of LC 50 values

Since Macintosh et al. (1990) described some activity of the CrylAc toxin towards A_j_ ipsilon, purified CrylAc toxin was tested on this insect for comparison but did not cause any significant mortality of A^. ipsilon.

Heliothis virescens

1.Crystal/spore mixture,

10 spore-crystals per cm b 95% fiducial limits of LC 50 values c PCT patent publication WO 90/06999 d strain isolated from Dipel™ (Abbott Laboratories, North

Chicago, 111., USA)

2.Toxin/protoxin assay.

ng/cm2 b 95 % fiducial limits of LC 50 values

Ostrinia nubilalis

1.Crystal/spore mixtures.

a 10 5 spore-crystals per cm 2 b 95% fiducial limits of LC 50 values strain isolated from Dipel T'M" (Abbott Laboratories)

2.Purified protoxin assay

a concentration at which 100 % mortality was observed (in ng/cm 2 )

The purified BTS02618A protoxin also showed a significant toxicity to Ostrinia nubilalis larvae, as compared with the CryI toxins that are most active against Ostrinia.

Plutella xylostella

Plutella xylostella larvae also showed significant mortality after application of purified BTS02618A toxin to their artificial diet in several experiments.

Spodoptera frugiperda

Crystal/spore mixtures of a bTS02618A gene-transformed crystal-minus Bt strain (Mahillon et al., 1989) were also found to significantly inhibit larval growth of S_j_ frugiperda larvae in insect feeding trials.

In conclusion, the strains of this invention and the BTS02618A protein of this invention have a strong insecticidal activity against a broad range of insects that are not susceptible to any single currently available Bt protein and have an activity against at least three Spodoptera spp. and against other Noctuidae, such as A^ ipsilon, M. brassica and H. virescens. as well as against Pyralidae, such as 0. nubilalis and Yponomeutidae such as Plutella xylostella. These results are summarized and compared with results for other Cryl genes (Van Frankenhuyzen, 1993) in Table 1 which shows the unique range of insects susceptible to the BTS02618A protein.

Example 3 : Identification of the bTS02618A gene The bTS02618A gene was identified in the BTS02618A strain by Southern blot analysis (Fig. 1) of Alul digested total DNA of the strain using, as a DNA probe, the DNA sequence of the crvIG gene (Gleave et al. , 1992) of SEQ ID No. 1 and using standard hybridization conditions. Partial DNA sequences of the bTS02618A gene, showing its 5' and 3' end portions, are shown in SEQ ID Nos. 2 and 3, respectively, and the full DNA sequence of the bTS02618A gene and the full amino acid sequence of the BTS02618A protein are shown in SEQ ID No. 4.

The partial sequences of SEQ ID Nos. 2 and 3 allow the bTS02618A gene to be recognized in the BTS02617A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains and allow the construction of probes to identify and isolate the full gene sequence in these and other Bt strains. The translation initiation codon of the bTS02618A gene is identified at nucleotide position 195-197 in SEQ ID No. 2, corresponding to nucleotide position 668-670 in SEQ ID No.4. The translation stop codon is identified at nucleotide position 1146-1148 in SEQ ID No. 3, corresponding to nucleotide position

4139-4141 in SEQ ID No. 4.

The bTS02618A gene was also identified in the BTS02617A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains by using the DNA sequence of SEQ ID No. 1 as a probe, as well as other DNA probes of conserved DNA fragments in cryl genes.

The full length bTS02618A gene was found to encode a 129.9 kD protoxin. A comparison of the amino acid sequence with other known CryI proteins showed that the C-terminal part (C- ter inal of conserved sequence block 5) was homologous with CrylG (88%) . The best homology for the N-terminal part (the toxin) was found with the CrylB toxin, but this was found to be less than 50% (homology is expressed as the number of perfect matches divided by the number of amino acids of the longest fragment) . The smallest insecticidal protein is believed to be a 69 kD (615 amino acids) protein stretching from amino acid number 44 to amino acid number 658 in SEQ ID No. 4. A smaller tryptic fragment of 55 kD (494 amino acids) , stretching from amino acid number 165 to amino acid number 658 in SEQ ID No. 4, still has insecticidal activity towards S. exigua. but this activity is significantly reduced. Thus, a truncated bTS02618A gene or an equivalent truncated gene preferably encodes the 69 kD protein of the BTS02618A protoxin of SEQ ID No.4 as described above.

Example 4 : Cloning and expression of the bTS02618A gene

In order to isolate the bTS02618A gene, total DNA from the BTS02618A strain was prepared and partially digested with Sau3A. The digested DNA was size fractionated on a sucrose gradient and fragments ranging from 7 Kb to 10 Kb were ligated to the BamHl-digested and BAP-treated cloning vector pUC19 (Yannisch-Perron et al., 1985). Recombinant E.coli clones containing the vector were then screened with the crylG DNA probe of SEQ ID No. 1 which is described in Example 3, to identify clones containing the bTS02618A gene. The so-identified DNA fragments were then sequenced according to Maxam and Gilbert (1980) . Partial sequences of the bTS02618A gene are shown in SEQ ID Nos. 2 and 3, and a full

sequence of the bTS02618A gene and the BTS02618A protein is shown in SEQ ID No. 4. Based on the DNA sequence analysis, the gene is cut with appropriate restriction enzymes to give the truncated bTS02618A gene encoding the BTS02618A toxin. Expression of the gene in E.coli was induced using standard procedures (Sambrook et al., 1989, supra) .

The bTS02618A gene is also introduced by routine procedures into a crystal-minus Bt strain, using Bt plasmids PGI2 or PGI3 (Mahillon and Seurinck 1988; Mahillon et al., 1988) .

Example 5: Insertion of the bTS02618A gene and the truncated bTS02618A gene in E. coli and insertion of the truncated bTS02618A gene in plants. In order to express the bTS02618A gene and the truncated bTS02618A gene of Example 4 in E. coli and in plants, different gene cassettes are made in E. coli according to the procedure described in EPA 86/300291.1 and EPA 88/402115.5.

To allow significant expression in plants, cassettes containing a) the truncated gene or b) a hybrid gene that is a fusion of i) the truncated gene and ii) the neo gene are each: inserted between the T-DNA border sequences of intermediate plant expression, vectors as described in EPA 86/300291.1; fused to transcript formation and polyadenylation signals in the plant expression vectors; placed under the control of the constitutive promoter from cauliflower mosaic virus driving the 35S3 transcript (Hull and Howell, 1987) or the 2' promoter from the TR-DNA of the octopine Ti-plasmid (Velten et al., 1984) ; and fused to 3' end transcript formation and polyadenylation signals of the octopine synthase gene (Gielen et al., 1984).

Using standard procedures (Deblaere et al., 1985), the intermediate plant expression vectors, containing the truncated bTS02618A gene, are transferred into the Aqrobacterium strain C58ClRif R (US Patent Application 821,582; EPA 86/300,291.1) carrying the disarmed Ti-plasmid pGV2260 (Vaeck et al., 1987). Selection for spectinomycin resistance yields cointegrated

plasmids, consisting of pGV2260 and the respective intermediate plant expression vectors. Each of these recombinant Aqrobacterium strains is then used to transform different cotton plants so that the truncated bTS02618A gene is contained in, and expressed by, different plant cells.

Example 6: Expression of the truncated bTS02618A gene in plants.

The insecticidal activity against Lepidoptera of the expression products of the truncated bTS02618A gene in leaves of transformed plants, generated from the transformed plant cells of Example 5, is evaluated by recording the growth rate and mortality of Agrotis and Spodoptera spp. larvae fed on these leaves. These results are compared with the growth rate of larvae fed leaves from untransformed plants. Toxicity assays against Agrotis and Spodoptera spp. are performed as described in EP 0,358,557, U.S. Patent Application 821,582 and EPA 86/300,291.1. A significantly higher mortality rate is obtained among larvae fed on leaves of transformed plants containing the truncated bTS02618A gene and the truncated bTS02618A-neo hybrid gene than among larvae fed the leaves of untransformed plants. The transformed plants are also found to resist Ostrinia nubilalis Mamestra brassica, Heliothis virescens and Plutella xylostella attack by their expression of the BTS02618A protein. Needless to say, this invention is not limited to the BTS02617A strain (BCCM-LMG P-12592) , the BTS02618A strain (BCCM-LMG P-12593) , the BTS02654B strain (BCCM-LMG P-12594) and the BTS02652E (BCCM-LMG P-13493) strain. Rather, the invention also includes any mutant or variant of the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B, and BTS02652E strain which produces crystals, crystal proteins, protoxin or toxin having substantially the same properties, particularly anti- Lepidoptera properties, quite particularly anti-Noctuidae, anti-Yponomeutidae and anti-Pyralidae properties, especially anti-Spodoptera. anti-Plutella, anti-Ostrinia anti-Mamestra; anti-Heliothis and anti-Agrotis properties, as the respective BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E crystals or

crystal proteins, or the BTS02618A protoxin or toxin. This invention also includes the bTS02618A gene and any insecticidally effective parts thereof, like the truncated bTS02618A gene. In this regard, the term "bTS02618A gene" as used herein means the gene isolated from the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B or BTS02652E strain and hybridizing to the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID No. 1 and any equivalent gene encoding a protoxin having substantially the same amino acid sequence and insecticidal activity as the BTS02618A protoxin and preferably containing the partial nucleotide sequences shown in SEQ ID Nos. 2 and 3, or the full sequence shown in SEQ ID No. 4.

This invention also is not limited to cotton plants transformed with the truncated bTS02618A gene. It includes any plant, such as tomato, tobacco, rapeseed, alfalfa, sunflower, lettuce, potato, corn, rice, soybean, Brassica species, sugar beet and other legumes and vegetables, transformed with an insecticidally effective part of the bTS02618A gene or an equivalent gene. Nor is this invention limited to the use of Agrobacterium tumefaciens Ti-plasmids for transforming plant cells with an insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part. Other known techniques for plant cell transformations, such as by means of liposomes, by electroporation or by vector systems based on plant viruses or pollen, can be used for transforming monocotyledons and dicotyledons with such a gene part.

Furthermore, DNA sequences other than those present naturally in the BTS02617A, BTS02618A, BTS02654B and BTS02652E strains and encoding the BTS02618A protoxin and toxin can be used for transforming plants and bacteria. In this regard, the natural DNA sequence of these genes can be modified by: 1) replacing some codons with others that code either for the same or different, preferably the same, amino acids; 2) deleting or adding some codons; and/or 3) reciprocal recombination as described by Ge et al. (1991) ; provided that such modifications do not substantially alter the properties, particularly the insecticidal properties, especially anti-lepidoptera

properties, of the encoded, insecticidally effective portions of the BTS02618A protoxin (e.g., toxin). For example, an artificial bTS02618A gene or gene part of this invention, as described above, having a modified codon usage, could be used in certain circumstances instead of a natural insecticidally effective bTS02618A gene part in a bTS02618A chimeric gene of this invention for transforming plants.

Also, other DNA recombinants containing all or part of the bTS02618A gene in association with other foreign DNA, particularly the DNA of vectors suitable for transforming plants and microorganisms other than E. coli. are encompassed by this invention. In this regard, this invention is not limited to the specific plasmids containing the bTS02618A gene, or parts thereof, that were heretofore described, but rather, this invention encompasses any DNA recombinants containing DNA sequences that are their equivalent. Further, the invention relates to all DNA recombinants that include all or part of the bTS02618A gene and that are suitable for transforming microorganisms (e.g., plant associated bacteria such as other Bacillus thuringiensis strains. Bacillus subtilis. Pseudomonas. and Xanthomonas or yeasts such as Streptomvces cerevisiae) under conditions which enable all or part of the gene to be expressed and to be recoverable from said microorganisms or to be transferred to a plant cell.

Table 1.

Activity of Cryl proteins towards several lepidopteran insect pests: + and - indicates the presence or absence of insecticidal activity, +/~ indicates low activity (according to Van Frankenhuyzen (1993)), NA indicates no data available, the protein BTS02618A is abbreviated as 2618A (data of Van Frankenhuyzen (1993) and this invention (for A. ipsilon and 2618A)).

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Chestukhina, G.G. and Stepanov, V.M. , FEBS Lett. 293, 1(2) , 25-28 (1991) .

Stanssens P., Opsomer C. , McKeown Y., Kramer W. , Zabeau M. and Fritz H.J. , Nucleic Acids Research 12., 4441-4454

(1989) .

Vaeck, M. , Reynaerts, A., Hόfte, H. , Jansens, S., De Beuckeleer, M. , Dean, C. , Zabeau, M. , Van Montagu, M. and Leemans, J., Nature 327. 33-37(1987). - Van Frankenhuyzen, "The Challenge of Bacillus thuringiensis", in "Bacillus thuringiensis. An Environmental Biopesticide: Theory and Practice", pp.1-35, eds. Entwistle, P.F., Cory, J.S., Bailey, M.J. and Higgs, S., John Wiley and Sons, New York (1993). - Velten, J. , Velten, L. , Hain, R. and Schell, J., EMBO J 3., 2723-2730 (1984).

Velten, J. and Schell, J. Nucleic Acids Research 13, 6981-6998 (1985) Visser, B. , Bosch, D. and Honee, G. , "Domain-Structure Studies of Bacillus thuringiensis Crystal Proteins: A Genetic Approach", In Bacillus thuringiensis. An Environmental Biopesticide: Theory and Practice, pp.71-88, eds. Entwistle, P.F., Cory, J.S., Bailey, M.J. and Higgs, S., John Wiley and Sons, New York (1993). - Yannisch-Perron, C. , Vierra, J. and Messing, J., Gene 33. 103-119 (1985).

SEQUENCE LISTING

(1) GENERAL INFORMATION:

(i) APPLICANT:

(A) NAME: PLANT GENETIC SYSTEMS N.V.

(B) STREET: Plateaustraat 22

(C) CITY: Gent

(E) COUNTRY: Belgium

(F) POSTAL CODE (ZIP) : 9000

(G) TELEPHONE: 32 9 2358454 (H) TELEFAX: 32 9 224 06 94 (I) TELEX: 11.361 Pgsgen

(ii) TITLE OF INVENTION: New Bacillus thuringiensis strains and their insecticidal proteins

(iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 4

(iv) COMPUTER READABLE FORM:

(A) MEDIUM TYPE: Floppy disk

(B) COMPUTER: IBM PC compatible

(C) OPERATING SYSTEM: PC-DOS/MS-DOS

(D) SOFTWARE: Patentin Release #1.0, Version #1.25 (EPO)

(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO : 1:

(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:

(A)SEQUENCE LENGTH : 19 nucleotides (B) SEQUENCE TYPE : nucleic acid probe (C)STRANDEDNESS : single stranded (D)TOPOLOGY : linear

(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: synthetic DNA

(ix) FEATURES: the probe is a part of the coding DNA strand of the crylG gene, described by Smulevitch et al . (1991) . (x) PROPERTIES : this probe is used to isolate the bTS02618A gene from its containing strain.

(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 1:

5 ' -TTCTGTACTATTGATTGTA-3 '

(3) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 2:

(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:

(A) LENGTH: 1561 base pairs

(B) TYPE: nucleic acid

(C) STRANDEDNESS: double

(D) TOPOLOGY: linear

(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)

(iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO (iii) ANTI-SENSE: NO

(vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE:

(A) ORGANISM: Bacillus thuringiensis

(B) STRAIN: BTS02618A

(ix) FEATURE:

(A) NAME/KEY: misc_feature

(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /function= "contains the translation initiation codon of the bTS02618A gene"

(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 2:

AAAAAGAAAT AGGAATAAAT ACTATCCATT TTTTCAAGAA ATATTTTTTT ATTAGAAAGG 60

AATCTTTCTT ACACGGGAAA ATCCTAAGAT TGAGAGTAAA GATATATATA TATAAATACA 120

ATAAAGAGTT TGTCAGGATT TTTGAAAGAT ATGATATGAA CATGCACTAG ATTTATAGTA 180

TAGGAGGAAA AAGTATGAAT CGAAATAATC AAAATGAATA TGAAATTATT GATGCCCCCC 240

ATTGTGGGTG TCCATCAGAT GACGATGTGA GGTATCCTTT GGCAAGTGAC CCAAATGCAG 300

CGTTACAAAA TATGAACTAT AAAGATTACT TACAAATGAC AGATGAGGAC TACACTGATT 360

CTTATATAAA TCCTAGTTTA TCTATTAGTG GTAGAGATGC AGTTCAGACT GCGCTTACTG 420

TTGTTGGGAG AATACTCGGG GCTTTAGGTG TTCCGTTTTC TGGACAAATA GTGAGTTTTT 480

ATCAATTCCT TTTAAATACA CTGTGGCCAG TTAATGATAC AGCTATATGG GAAGCTTTCA 540

TGCGACAGGT GGAGGAACTT GTCAATCAAC AAATAACAGA ATTTGCAAGA AATCAGGCAC 600

TTGCAAGATT GCAAGGATTA GGAGACTCTT TTAATGTATA TCAACGTTCC CTTCAAAATT 660

GGTTGGCTGA TCGAAATGAT ACACGAAATT TAAGTGTTGT TCGTGCTCAA TTTATAGCTT 720

TAGACCTTGA TTTTGTTAAT GCTATTCCAT TGTTTGCAGT AAATGGACAG CAGGTTCCAT 780

TACTGTCAGT ATATGCACAA GCTGTGAATT TACATTTGTT ATTATTAAAA GATGCATCTC 840

TTTTTGGAGA AGGATGGGGA TTCACACAGG GGGAAATTTC CACATATTAT GACCGTCAAT 900

TGGAACTAAC CGCTAAGTAC ACTAATTACT GTGAAACTTG GTATAATACA GGTTTAGATC 960

GTTTAAGAGG AACAAATACT GAAAGTTGGT TAAGATATCA TCAATTCCGT AGAGAAATGA 1020

CTTTAGTGGT ATTAGATGTT GTGGCGCTAT TTCCATATTA TGATGTACGA CTTTATCCAA 1080

CGGGATCAAA CCCACAGCTT ACACGTGAGG TATATACAGA TCCGATTGTA TTTAATCCAC 1140

CAGCTAATGT TGGACTTTGC CGACGTTGGG GTACTAATCC CTATAATACT TTTTCTGAGC 1200

TCGAAAATGC CTTCATTCGC CCACCACATC TTTTTGATAG GCTGAATAGC TTAACAATCA 1260

GCAGTAATCG ATTTCCAGTT TCATCTAATT TTATGGATTA TTGGTCAGGA CATACGTTAC 1320

GCCGTAGTTA TCTGAACGAT TCAGCAGTAC AAGAAGATAG TTATGGCCTA ATTACAACCA 1380

CAAGAGCAAC AATTAATCCC GGAGTTGATG GAACAAACCG CATAGAGTCA ACGGCAGTAG 1440

ATTTTCGTTC TGCATTGATA GGTATATATG GCGTGAATAG AGCTTCTTTT GTCCCAGGAG 1500

GCTTGTTTAA TGGTACGACT TCTCCTGCTA ATGGAGGATG TAGAGATCTC TATGATACAA 1560

A 1561

(4) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 3 :

(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:

(A) LENGTH: 1554 base pairs

(B) TYPE: nucleic acid

(C) ΞTRANDEDNESS: double

(D) TOPOLOGY: linear

(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO (iii) ANTI-SENSE: NO

(vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE:

(A) ORGANISM: Bacillus thuringiensis

(B) STRAIN: BTS02618A

(ix) FEATURE:

(A) NAME/KEY: misc_feature

(B) LOCATION: 1146..1148

(D) OTHER INFORMATION: /function= "Presumed translational stop codon of bTS02618A gene"

(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 3:

AAAATTATCC AACATACATT TATCAAAAAG TAGATGCATC GGTGTTAAAG CCTTATACAC 60

GCTATAGACT AGATGGATTT GTGAAGNGTA GTCAAGATTT AGAAATTGAT CTCATCCACC 120

ATCATAAAGT CCATCTTGTA AAAAATGTAC CAGATAATTT AGTATCTGAT ACTTACTCAG 180

ATGGTTCTTG CAGCGGAATC AACCGTTGTG ATGAACAGCA TCAGGTAGAT ATGCAGCTAG 240

ATGCGGAGCA TCATCCAATG GATTGCTGTG AAGCGGCTCA AACACATGAG TTTTCTTCCT 300

ATATTAATAC AGGGGATCTA AATGCAAGTG TAGATCAGGG CATTTGGGTT GTATTAAAAG 360

TTCGAACAAC AGATGGGTAT GCGACGTTAG GAAATCTTGA ATTGGTAGAG GTTGGGCCAT 420

TATCGGGTGA ATCTCTAGAA CGGGAACAAA GAGATAATGC GAAATGGAAT GCAGAGCTAG 480

GAAGAAAACG TGCAGAAATA GATCGTGTGT ATTTAGCTGC GAAACAAGCA ATTAATCATC 540

TGTTTGTAGA CTATCAAGAT CAACAATTAA ATCCAGAAAT TGGGCTAGCA GAAATTAATG 600

AAGCTTCAAA TCTTGTAGAG TCAATTTCGG GTGTATATAG TGATACACTA TTACAGATTC 660

CTGGGATTAA CTACGAAATT TACACAGAGT TATCCGATCG CTTACAACAA GCATCGTATC 720

TGTATACGTC TAGAAATGCG GTGCAAAATG GAGACTTTAA CAGTGGTCTA GATAGTTGGA 780

ATACAACTAT GGATGCATCG GTTCAGCAAG ATGGCAATAT GCATTTCTTA GTTCTTTCGC 840

ATTGGGATGC ACAAGTTTCC CAACAATTGA GAGTAAATCC GAATTGTAAG TATGTCTTAC 900

GTGTGACAGC AAGAAAAGTA GGAGGCGGAG ATGGATACGT CACAATCCGA GATGGCGCTC 960

ATCACCAAGA AACTCTTACA TTTAATGCAT GTGACTACGA TGTAAATGGT ACGTATGTCA 1020

ATGACAATTC GTATATAACA GAAGAAGTGG TATTCTACCC AGAGACAAAA CATATGTGGG 1080

TAGAGGTGAG TGAATCCGAA GGTTCATTCT ATATAGACAG TATTGAGTTT ATTGAAACAC 1140

AAGAGTAGAA GAGGGGGATC CTAACGTATA GCAACTATGA GAGGATACTC CGTACAAACA 1200

AAGATTAAAA AAAGGTAAAA TGAATAGAAC CCCCTACTGG TAGAAGGACC GATAGGGGGT 1260

TCTTACATGA AAAAATGTAG CTGTTTACTA AGGTGTATAA AAAACAGCAT ATCTGATAGA 1320

AAAAAGTGAG TACCTTATAA AGAAAGAATT CCATTCACAG TTTCGGTATC ATATAAATAA 1380

TGATAGGGGT ATCCTTCTTA TTTACATTAT TTTTCGCAAT TATCTCGACG TTCTTCTTTC 1440

CGCTCACAAT GATGATGATC ATGACAACAA TCGCGTCCAT AGCGAACTCT TTCGATATTA 1500

ATAATATCTA AACTCGTGTA GCAGTCATTT CCATTTTTTT TGATCCAGTA AATA 1554

(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 4:

(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:

(A) LENGTH: 4344 base pairs

(B) TYPE: nucleic acid

(C) STRANDEDNESS: double

(D) TOPOLOGY: linear

(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic) (iii) HYPOTHETICAL: NO (iii) ANTI-SENSE: NO

(ix) FEATURE:

(A) NAME/KEY: CDS

(B) LOCATION: 668..4141

(D) OTHER INFORMATION: encompasses the entire sequence of SEQ ID NO 2: from nucleotide position 474 to 2034 in SEQ ID NO 4; also encompasses part of the sequence of SEQ ID NO 3 : from nucleotide position 2994 to nucleotide position 4344 in SEQ ID NO 4; SEQ ID NO 3 shows additional nucleotides, located downstream (3') from the sequence shown in SEQ ID NO 4 (nucleotide position 1352 to nucleotide position 1554 in SEQ ID NO 3)

(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 4:

GAATTCGAGC TCGGTACCTT TTCAGTGTAT CGTTTCCCTT CCATCAGGTT TTCAAATTGA 60

AAAGCCGAAT GATTTGAAAC TTGTTTACGA TGTAAGTCAT TTGTCTATGA CGAAAGATAC 120

GTGTAAAAAA CGTATTGAGA TTGATGAATG TGGACAAGTA GAAATTGACT TACAAGTATT 180

AAAGATTAAG GGTGTCCTTT CTTTTATCGG AAATTTCTCT ATTGAACCTA TTCTGTGTGA 240

AAACATGTAT ACAACGGTTG ATAGAGATCC GTCTATTTCC TTAAGTTTCC AAGATACGGT 300

ATATGTGGAC CATATTTTAA AATATAGCGT CCAACAACTA CCATATTATG TAATTGATGG 360

TGATCATATT CAAGTACGTG ATTTACAAAT CAAACTGATG AAAGAGAATC CGCAATCTGC 420

TCAAGTATCA GGTTTGTTTT GTTTTGTATA TGAGTAAGAA CCGAAGGTTT GTAAAAAAGA 480

AATAGGAATA AATACTATCC ATTTTTTCAA GAAATATTTT TTTATTAGAA AGGAATCTTT 540

CTTACACGGG AAAATCCTAA GATTGAGAGT AAAGATATAT ATATATAAAT ACAATAAAGA 600

GTTTGTCAGG ATTTTTGAAA GATATGATAT GAACATGCAC TAGATTTATA GTATAGGAGG 660

AAAAAGT ATG AAT CGA AAT AAT CAA AAT GAA TAT GAA ATT ATT GAT GCC 709 Met Asn Arg Asn Asn Gin Asn Glu Tyr Glu lie lie Asp Ala 1 5 10

CCC CAT TGT GGG TGT CCA TCA GAT GAC GAT GTG AGG TAT CCT TTG GCA 757 Pro His Cys Gly Cys Pro Ser Asp Asp Asp Val Arg Tyr Pro Leu Ala 15 20 25 30

AGT GAC CCA AAT GCA GCG TTA CAA AAT ATG AAC TAT AAA GAT TAC TTA 805 Ser Asp Pro Asn Ala Ala Leu Gin Asn Met Asn Tyr Lys Asp Tyr Leu 35 40 45

CAA ATG ACA GAT GAG GAC TAC ACT GAT TCT TAT ATA AAT CCT AGT TTA 853 Gin Met Thr Asp Glu Asp Tyr Thr Asp Ser Tyr lie Asn Pro Ser Leu 50 55 60

TCT ATT AGT GGT AGA GAT GCA GTT CAG ACT GCG CTT ACT GTT GTT GGG 901 Ser lie Ser Gly Arg Asp Ala Val Gin Thr Ala Leu Thr Val Val Gly 65 70 75

AGA ATA CTC GGG GCT TTA GGT GTT CCG TTT TCT GGA CAA ATA GTG AGT 949 Arg He Leu Gly Ala Leu Gly Val Pro Phe Ser Gly Gin He Val Ser 80 85 90

TTT TAT CAA TTC CTT TTA AAT ACA CTG TGG CCA GTT AAT GAT ACA GCT 997 Phe Tyr Gin Phe Leu Leu Asn Thr Leu Trp Pro Val Asn Asp Thr Ala 95 100 105 110

ATA TGG GAA GCT TTC ATG CGA CAG GTG GAG GAA CTT GTC AAT CAA CAA 1045 He Trp Glu Ala Phe Met Arg Gin Val Glu Glu Leu Val Asn Gin Gin 115 120 125

ATA ACA GAA TTT GCA AGA AAT CAG GCA CTT GCA AGA TTG CAA GGA TTA 1093 He Thr Glu Phe Ala Arg Asn Gin Ala Leu Ala Arg Leu Gin Gly Leu 130 135 140

GGA GAC TCT TTT AAT GTA TAT CAA CGT TCC CTT CAA AAT TGG TTG GCT 1141 Gly Asp Ser Phe Asn Val Tyr Gin Arg Ser Leu Gin Asn Trp Leu Ala 145 150 155

GAT CGA AAT GAT ACA CGA AAT TTA AGT GTT GTT CGT GCT CAA TTT ATA 1189 Asp Arg Asn Asp Thr Arg Asn Leu Ser Val Val Arg Ala Gin Phe He 160 165 170

GCT TTA GAC CTT GAT TTT GTT AAT GCT ATT CCA TTG TTT GCA GTA AAT 1237 Ala Leu Asp Leu Asp Phe Val Asn Ala He Pro Leu Phe Ala Val Asn 175 180 185 190

GGA CAG CAG GTT CCA TTA CTG TCA GTA TAT GCA CAA GCT GTG AAT TTA 1285 Gly Gin Gin Val Pro Leu Leu Ser Val Tyr Ala Gin Ala Val Asn Leu 195 200 205

CAT TTG TTA TTA TTA AAA GAT GCA TCT CTT TTT GGA GAA GGA TGG GGA 1333 His Leu Leu Leu Leu Lys Asp Ala Ser Leu Phe Gly Glu Gly Trp Gly 210 215 220

TTC ACA CAG GGG GAA ATT TCC ACA TAT TAT GAC CGT CAA TTG GAA CTA 1381 Phe Thr Gin Gly Glu He Ser Thr Tyr Tyr Asp Arg Gin Leu Glu Leu 225 230 235

ACC GCT AAG TAC ACT AAT TAC TGT GAA ACT TGG TAT AAT ACA GGT TTA 1429 Thr Ala Lys Tyr Thr Asn Tyr Cys Glu Thr Trp Tyr Asn Thr Gly Leu 240 245 250

GAT CGT TTA AGA GGA ACA AAT ACT GAA AGT TGG TTA AGA TAT CAT CAA 1477 Asp Arg Leu Arg Gly Thr Asn Thr Glu Ser Trp Leu Arg Tyr His Gin 255 260 265 270

TTC CGT AGA GAA ATG ACT TTA GTG GTA TTA GAT GTT GTG GCG CTA TTT 1525 Phe Arg Arg Glu Met Thr Leu Val Val Leu Asp Val Val Ala Leu Phe 275 280 285

CCA TAT TAT GAT GTA CGA CTT TAT CCA ACG GGA TCA AAC CCA CAG CTT 1573 Pro Tyr Tyr Asp Val Arg Leu Tyr Pro Thr Gly Ser Asn Pro Gin Leu 290 295 300

ACA CGT GAG GTA TAT ACA GAT CCG ATT GTA TTT AAT CCA CCA GCT AAT 1621 Thr Arg Glu Val Tyr Thr Asp Pro He Val Phe Asn Pro Pro Ala Asn 305 310 315

GTT GGA CTT TGC CGA CGT TGG GGT ACT AAT CCC TAT AAT ACT TTT TCT 1669 Val Gly Leu Cys Arg Arg Trp Gly Thr Asn Pro Tyr Asn Thr Phe Ser 320 325 330

GAG CTC GAA AAT GCC TTC ATT CGC CCA CCA CAT CTT TTT GAT AGG CTG 1717 Glu Leu Glu Asn Ala Phe He Arg Pro Pro His Leu Phe Asp Arg Leu 335 340 345 350

AAT AGC TTA ACA ATC AGC AGT AAT CGA TTT CCA GTT TCA TCT AAT TTT 1765 Asn Ser Leu Thr He Ser Ser Asn Arg Phe Pro Val Ser Ser Asn Phe 355 360 365

ATG GAT TAT TGG TCA GGA CAT ACG TTA CGC CGT AGT TAT CTG AAC GAT 1813 Met Asp Tyr Trp Ser Gly His Thr Leu Arg Arg Ser Tyr Leu Asn Asp 370 375 380

TCA GCA GTA CAA GAA GAT AGT TAT GGC CTA ATT ACA ACC ACA AGA GCA 1861 Ser Ala Val Gin Glu Asp Ser Tyr Gly Leu He Thr Thr Thr Arg Ala 385 390 395

ACA ATT AAT CCC GGA GTT GAT GGA ACA AAC CGC ATA GAG TCA ACG GCA 1909 Thr He Asn Pro Gly Val Asp Gly Thr Asn Arg He Glu Ser Thr Ala 400 405 410

GTA GAT TTT CGT TCT GCA TTG ATA GGT ATA TAT GGC GTG AAT AGA GCT 1957 Val Asp Phe Arg Ser Ala Leu He Gly He Tyr Gly Val Asn Arg Ala 415 420 425 430

TCT TTT GTC CCA GGA GGC TTG TTT AAT GGT ACG ACT TCT CCT GCT AAT 2005 Ser Phe Val Pro Gly Gly Leu Phe Asn Gly Thr Thr Ser Pr© Ala Asn 435 440 445

GGA GGA TGT AGA GAT CTC TAT GAT ACA AAT GAT GAA TTA CCA CCA GAT 2053 Gly Gly Cys Arg Asp Leu Tyr Asp Thr Asn Asp Glu Leu Pro Pro Asp 450 455 460

GAA AGT ACC GGA AGT TCA ACC CAT AGA CTA TCT CAT GTT ACC TTT TTT 2101 Glu Ser Thr Gly Ser Ser Thr His Arg Leu Ser His Val Thr Phe Phe 465 470 475

AGC TTT CAA ACT AAT CAG GCT GGA TCT ATA GCT AAT GCA GGA AGT GTA 2149 Ser Phe Gin Thr Asn Gin Ala Gly Ser He Ala Asn Ala Gly Ser Val 480 485 490

CCT ACT TAT GTT TGG ACC CGT CGT GAT GTG GAC CTT AAT AAT ACG ATT 2197 Pro Thr Tyr Val Trp Thr Arg Arg Asp Val Asp Leu Asn Asn Thr He 495 500 505 510

ACC CCA AAT AGA ATT ACA CAA TTA CCA TTG GTA AAG GCA TCT GCA CCT 2245 Thr Pro Asn Arg He Thr Gin Leu Pro Leu Val Lys Ala Ser Ala Pro 515 520 525

GTT TCG GGT ACT ACG GTC TTA AAA GGT CCA GGA TTT ACA GGA GGG GGT 2293 Val Ser Gly Thr Thr Val Leu Lys Gly Pro Gly Phe Thr Gly Gly Gly 530 535 540

ATA CTC CGA AGA ACA ACT AAT GGC ACA TTT GGA ACG TTA AGA GTA ACG 2341 He Leu Arg Arg Thr Thr Asn Gly Thr Phe Gly Thr Leu Arg Val Thr 545 550 555

GTT AAT TCA CCA TTA ACA CAA CAA TAT CGC CTA AGA GTT CGT TTT GCC 2389 Val Asn Ser Pro Leu Thr Gin Gin Tyr Arg Leu Arg Val Arg Phe Ala 560 565 570

TCA ACA GGA AAT TTC AGT ATA AGG GTA CTC CGT GGA GGG GTT TCT ATC 2437 Ser Thr Gly Asn Phe Ser He Arg Val Leu Arg Gly Gly Val Ser He 575 580 585 590

GGT GAT GTT AGA TTA GGG AGC ACA ATG AAC AGA GGG CAG GAA CTA ACT 2485 Gly Asp Val Arg Leu Gly Ser Thr Met Asn Arg Gly Gin Glu Leu Thr 595 600 605

TAC GAA TCC TTT TTC ACA AGA GAG TTT ACT ACT ACT GGT CCG TTC AAT 2533 Tyr Glu Ser Phe Phe Thr Arg Glu Phe Thr Thr Thr Gly Pro Phe Asn 610 615 620

CCG CCT TTT ACA TTT ACA CAA GCT CAA GAG ATT CTA ACA GTG AAT GCA 2581 Pro Pro Phe Thr Phe Thr Gin Ala Gin Glu He Leu Thr Val Asn Ala 625 630 635

GAA GGT GTT AGC ACC GGT GGT GAA TAT TAT ATA GAT AGA ATT GAA ATT 2629 Glu Gly Val Ser Thr Gly Gly Glu Tyr Tyr He Asp Arg He Glu He 640 645 650

GTC CCT GTG AAT CCG GCA CGA GAA GCG GAA GAG GAT TTA GAA GCG GCG 2677 Val Pro Val Asn Pro Ala Arg Glu Ala Glu Glu Asp Leu Glu Ala Ala 655 660 665 670

AAG AAA GCG GTG GCG AGC TTG TTT ACA CGT ACA AGG GAC GGA TTA CAG 2725 Lys Lys Ala Val Ala Ser Leu Phe Thr Arg Thr Arg Asp Gly Leu Gin 675 680 685

GTA AAT GTG ACA GAT TAT CAA GTG GAC CAA GCG GCA AAT TTA GTG TCA 2773 Val Asn Val Thr Asp Tyr Gin Val Asp Gin Ala Ala Asn Leu Val Ser 690 695 700

TGC TTA TCC GAT GAA CAA TAT GGG CAT GAC AAA AAG ATG TTA TTG GAA 2821 Cys Leu Ser Asp Glu Gin Tyr Gly His Asp Lys Lys Met Leu Leu Glu 705 710 715

GCG GTA AGA GCG GCA AAA CGC CTC AGC CGC GAA CGC AAC TTA CTT CAA 2869 Ala Val Arg Ala Ala Lys Arg Leu Ser Arg Glu Arg Asn Leu Leu Gin 720 725 730

GAT CCA GAT TTT AAT ACA ATC AAT AGT ACA GAA GAG AAT GGC TGG AAG 2917 Asp Pro Asp Phe Asn Thr He Asn Ser Thr Glu Glu Asn Gly Trp Lys 735 740 745 750

GCA AGT AAC GGT GTT ACT ATT AGC GAG GGC GGT CCA TTC TTT AAA GGT 2965 Ala Ser Asn Gly Val Thr He Ser Glu Gly Gly Pro Phe Phe Lys Gly 755 760 765

CGT GCA CTT CAG TTA GCA AGC GCA AGA GAA AAT TAT CCA ACA TAC ATT 3013 Arg Ala Leu Gin Leu Ala Ser Ala Arg Glu Asn Tyr Pro Thr Tyr He 770 775 780

TAT CAA AAA GTA GAT GCA TCG GTG TTA AAG CCT TAT ACA CGC TAT AGA 3061 Tyr Gin Lys Val Asp Ala Ser Val Leu Lys Pro Tyr Thr Arg Tyr Arg 785 790 795

CTA GAT GGA TTT GTG AAG AGT AGT CAA GAT TTA GAA ATT GAT CTC ATC 3109 Leu Asp Gly Phe Val Lys Ser Ser Gin Asp Leu Glu He Asp Leu He 800 805 810

CAC CAT CAT AAA GTC CAT CTT GTA AAA AAT GTA CCA GAT AAT TTA GTA 3157 His His His Lys Val His Leu Val Lys Asn Val Pro Asp Asn Leu Val 815 820 825 830

TCT GAT ACT TAC TCA GAT GGT TCT TGC AGC GGA ATC AAC CGT TGT GAT 3205 Ser Asp Thr Tyr Ser Asp Gly Ser Cys Ser Gly He Asn Arg Cys Asp 835 840 845

GAA CAG CAT CAG GTA GAT ATG CAG CTA GAT GCG GAG CAT CAT CCA ATG 3253 Glu Gin His Gin Val Asp Met Gin Leu Asp Ala Glu His His Pro Met 850 855 860

GAT TGC TGT GAA GCG GCT CAA ACA CAT GAG TTT TCT TCC TAT ATT AAT 3301 Asp Cys Cys Glu Ala Ala Gin Thr His Glu Phe Ser Ser Tyr He Asn 865 870 875

ACA GGG GAT CTA AAT GCA AGT GTA GAT CAG GGC ATT TGG GTT GTA TTA 3349 Thr Gly Asp Leu Asn Ala Ser Val Asp Gin Gly He Trp Val Val Leu 880 885 890

AAA GTT CGA ACA ACA GAT GGG TAT GCG ACG TTA GGA AAT CTT GAA TTG 3397 Lys Val Arg Thr Thr Asp Gly Tyr Ala Thr Leu Gly Asn Leu Glu Leu 895 900 905 910

GTA GAG GTT GGG CCA TTA TCG GGT GAA TCT CTA GAA CGG GAA CAA AGA 3445 Val Glu Val Gly Pro Leu Ser Gly Glu Ser Leu Glu Arg Glu Gin Arg 915 920 925

GAT AAT GCG AAA TGG AAT GCA GAG CTA GGA AGA AAA CGT GCA GAA ATA '3493 Asp Asn Ala Lys Trp Asn Ala Glu Leu Gly Arg Lys Arg Ala Glu He 930 935 940

GAT CGT GTG TAT TTA GCT GCG AAA CAA GCA ATT AAT CAT CTG TTT GTA 3541 Asp Arg Val Tyr Leu Ala Ala Lys Gin Ala He Asn His Leu Phe Val 945 950 955

GAC TAT CAA GAT CAA CAA TTA AAT CCA GAA ATT GGG CTA GCA GAA ATT 3589 Asp Tyr Gin Asp Gin Gin Leu Asn Pro Glu He Gly Leu Ala Glu He 960 965 970

AAT GAA GCT TCA AAT CTT GTA GAG TCA ATT TCG GGT GTA TAT AGT GAT 3637 Asn Glu Ala Ser Asn Leu Val Glu Ser He Ser Gly Val Tyr Ser Asp 975 980 985 990

ACA CTA TTA CAG ATT CCT GGG ATT AAC TAC GAA ATT TAC ACA GAG TTA 3685 Thr Leu Leu Gin He Pro Gly He Asn Tyr Glu He Tyr Thr Glu Leu 995 1000 1005

TCC GAT CGC TTA CAA CAA GCA TCG TAT CTG TAT ACG TCT AGA AAT GCG 3733 Ser Asp Arg Leu Gin Gin Ala Ser Tyr Leu Tyr Thr Ser Arg Asn Ala 1010 1015 1020

GTG CAA AAT GGA GAC TTT AAC AGT GGT CTA GAT AGT TGG AAT ACA ACT 3781 Val Gin Asn Gly Asp Phe Asn Ser Gly Leu Asp Ser Trp Asn Thr Thr 1025 1030 1035

ATG GAT GCA TCG GTT CAG CAA GAT GGC AAT ATG CAT TTC TTA GTT CTT 3829 Met Asp Ala Ser Val Gin Gin Asp Gly Asn Met His Phe Leu Val Leu^ 1040 1045 1050

TCG CAT TGG GAT GCA CAA GTT TCC CAA CAA TTG AGA GTA AAT CCG AAT 3877 Ser His Trp Asp Ala Gin Val Ser Gin Gin Leu Arg Val Asn Pro Asn 1055 1060 1065 1070

TGT AAG TAT GTC TTA CGT GTG ACA GCA AGA AAA GTA GGA GGC GGA GAT 3925 Cys Lys Tyr Val Leu Arg Val Thr Ala Arg Lys Val Gly Gly Gly Asp 1075 1080 1085

GGA TAC GTC ACA ATC CGA GAT GGC GCT CAT CAC CAA GAA ACT CTT ACA 3973 Gly Tyr Val Thr He Arg Asp Gly Ala His His Gin Glu Thr Leu Thr 1090 1095 1100

TTT AAT GCA TGT GAC TAC GAT GTA AAT GGT ACG TAT GTC AAT GAC AAT 4021 Phe Asn Ala Cys Asp Tyr Asp Val Asn Gly Thr Tyr Val Asn Asp Asn 1105 1110 1115

TCG TAT ATA ACA GAA GAA GTG GTA TTC TAC CCA GAG ACA AAA CAT ATG 4069 Ser Tyr He Thr Glu Glu Val Val Phe Tyr Pro Glu Thr Lys His Met 1120 1125 1130

TGG GTA GAG GTG AGT GAA TCC GAA GGT TCA TTC TAT ATA GAC AGT ATT 4117 Trp Val Glu Val Ser Glu Ser Glu Gly Ser Phe Tyr He Asp Ser He 1135 1140 1145 1150

GAG TTT ATT GAA ACA CAA GAG TAGAAGAGGG GGATCCTAAC GTATAGCAAC 4168

Glu Phe He Glu Thr Gin Glu 1155

TATGAGAGGA TACTCCGTAC AAACAAAGAT TAAAAAAAGG TAAAATGAAT AGAACCCCCT 4228

ACTGGTAGAA GGACCGATAG GGGGTTCTTA CATGAAAAAA TGTAGCTGTT TACTAAGGTG 4288

TATAAAAAAC AGCATATCTG ATAGAAAAAA GTGAGTACCT TATAAAGAAA GAATTC 4344