Bt L-7601 is a UV resistant wild-type strain, which belongs to Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. dendrolimus serotype H4a4b. It was isolated from nature, and produced a dark brown pigment during the exponential phase of growth. Bt L-7601 had the ability to produce pigment in a general nutrition-abundant medium, which had no L-tyrosine. The pigment was identified as melanin based on chemical testing, its light absorbance, and FT-IR analysis. Bt L-7601 has a strong resistance to UV light. After 30 min irradiation its survival rate was 17 times higher than that of the strain B. thuringiensis subsp. colmeri 15A3, which had no pigment. Results of the bioassays of residual insecticidal activity of Bt formulation with and without pigment produced by Bt L-7601 against larvae of Helicoverpa armigera and Spodoptera exigua after exposure to UV irradiation showed that the pigment is an excellent UV protective agent for the insecticidal proteins.
Bacillus cereus 58 (Bc58) is a UV-resistant wild type strain that has an ability to produce a sorrel pigment induced by L-tyrosine. The Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) spectra and chemical tests of its pigment are similar to that of the standard melanin (Sigma). A bioassay shows that the LC 50 of a Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) formulation added with the melanin of Bc58 and exposed to UV for 5 h is 16.1 µg/m1, which is similar to that of the Bt formulation without UV treatment, however, it is almost double that of the Bt formulation exposed to UV without the melanin of Bc58. The result of SDS-PAGE indicates that the melanin of Bc58 can protect the insecticidal crystal proteins from degradation. This suggests that it is an excellent UV protective agent for the insecticidal crystal proteins of the Bt formulation.
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