H. Ernest Schnepf
Dow AgroSciences
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Featured researches published by H. Ernest Schnepf.
Nature Biotechnology | 2001
Daniel Moellenbeck; Melvin L. Peters; James W. Bing; James R. Rouse; Laura S. Higgins; Lynne E. Sims; Tony Nevshemal; Lisa Marshall; R. Tracy Ellis; Paul G. Bystrak; Bruce A. Lang; James Stewart; Kristen Kouba; Valerie Sondag; Vicki D. Gustafson; Katy Nour; Deping Xu; Jan Swenson; Jian Zhang; Thomas H. Czapla; George E. Schwab; Susan Jayne; Brian A. Stockhoff; Kenneth E. Narva; H. Ernest Schnepf; Steven J. Stelman; Candace G. Poutre; Michael G. Koziel; Nicholas B. Duck
Field tests of corn co-expressing two new delta-endotoxins from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) have demonstrated protection from root damage by western corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte). The level of protection exceeds that provided by chemical insecticides. In the bacterium, these proteins form crystals during the sporulation phase of the growth cycle, are encoded by a single operon, and have molecular masses of 14 kDa and 44 kDa. Corn rootworm larvae fed on corn roots expressing the proteins showed histopathological symptoms in the midgut epithelium.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2002
R. Tracy Ellis; Brian A. Stockhoff; Lisa Stamp; H. Ernest Schnepf; George E. Schwab; Mark Knuth; Josh Russell; Guy A. Cardineau; Kenneth E. Narva
ABSTRACT A new family of insecticidal crystal proteins was discovered by screening sporulated Bacillus thuringiensis cultures for oral activity against western corn rootworm (WCR) larvae. B. thuringiensis isolates PS80JJ1, PS149B1, and PS167H2 have WCR insecticidal activity attributable to parasporal inclusion bodies containing proteins with molecular masses of ca. 14 and 44 kDa. The genes encoding these polypeptides reside in apparent operons, and the 14-kDa protein open reading frame (ORF) precedes the 44-kDa protein ORF. Mutagenesis of either gene in the apparent operons dramatically reduced insecticidal activity of the corresponding recombinant B. thuringiensis strain. Bioassays performed with separately expressed, biochemically purified 14- and 44-kDa polypeptides also demonstrated that both proteins are required for WCR mortality. Sequence comparisons with other known B. thuringiensis insecticidal proteins failed to reveal homology with previously described Cry, Cyt, or Vip proteins. However, there is evidence that the 44-kDa polypeptide and the 41.9- and 51.4-kDa binary dipteran insecticidal proteins from Bacillus sphaericus are evolutionarily related. The 14- and 44-kDa polypeptides from isolates PS80JJ1, PS149B1, and PS167H2 have been designated Cry34Aa1, Cry34Ab1, and Cry34Ac1, respectively, and the 44-kDa polypeptides from these isolates have been designated Cry35Aa1, Cry35Ab1, and Cry35Ac1, respectively.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005
H. Ernest Schnepf; Stacey Lee; JoAnna Dojillo; Paula Burmeister; Kristin Fencil; Lisa Morera; Linda Nygaard; Kenneth E. Narva; Jeff D. Wolt
ABSTRACT Bacillus thuringiensis crystal proteins of the Cry34 and Cry35 classes function as binary toxins showing activity on the western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte. We surveyed 6,499 B. thuringiensis isolates by hybridization for sequences related to cry35A genes, identifying 78 strains. Proteins of the appropriate molecular mass (ca. 44 kDa) for Cry35 were observed in 42 of the strains. Full-length, or nearly full-length, sequences of 34 cry34 genes and 16 cry35 genes were also obtained from cloning, PCR analysis, and DNA sequencing. These included representatives of all known Cry34A, Cry34B, Cry35A, and Cry35B classes, as well as a novel Cry34A/Cry35A-like pair. Bioassay analysis indicated that cry35-hybridizing strains not producing a ca. 14-kDa protein, indicative of Cry34, were not active on corn rootworms, and that the previously identified Cry34A/Cry35A pairs were more active than the Cry34B/Cry35B pairs. The cry35-hybridizing B. thuringiensis strains were found in locales and materials typical for other B. thuringiensis strains. Comparison of the sequences with the geographic origins of the strains showed that identical, or nearly identical, sequences were found in strains from both Australasia and the Americas. Sequence similarity searches revealed that Cry34 proteins are similar to predicted proteins in Photorhabdus luminescens and Dictyostelium discoidium, and that Cry35Ab1 contains a segment similar to beta-trefoil domains that may be a binding motif. The binary Cry34/Cry35 B. thuringiensis crystal proteins thus appear closely related to each other, are environmentally ubiquitous, and share sequence similarities consistent with activity through membrane disruption in target organisms.
Archive | 1994
Mark Thompson; George E. Schwab; H. Ernest Schnepf; Brian A. Stockhoff
Archive | 2002
H. Ernest Schnepf; Carol Wicker; Kenneth E. Narva; Michele Walz; Brian A. Stockhoff
Archive | 1993
Jewel Payne; M. Keith Kennedy; John Brookes Randall; Henry Meier; Heidi J. Uick; Luis Foncerrada; H. Ernest Schnepf; George E. Schwab; Jenny M. Fu
Archive | 1993
Jewel Payne; Raymond J. C. Cannon; H. Ernest Schnepf; George E. Schwab
Archive | 1995
Mark Thompson; George E. Schwab; H. Ernest Schnepf; Brian A. Stockhoff
Archive | 1995
Jewel Payne; August J. Sick; Kenneth E. Narva; H. Ernest Schnepf; George E. Schwab
Archive | 1997
Jerald S. Feitelson; H. Ernest Schnepf; Kenneth E. Narva; Brian A. Stockhoff; James Schmeits; David Loewer; George E. Schwab; Charles Joseph Dullum; Judy Muller-Cohn; Lisa Stamp