Introduction

Mosquito-borne diseases create a significant burden every year. For example, malaria caused 438,000 deaths in 2015, and the dengue incidence has risen 30-fold in the past 30 years around the world (WHO 2016). The Asian tiger mosquito Aedes albopictus transmits many viral infections, including the yellow fever, dengue and Chikungunya (Hochedez et al. 2006), as well as several filarial nematodes such as Dirofilaria immitis (Cancrini et al. 2003). Aedes albopictus is capable of hosting the Zika virus and is considered a potential vector for Zika transmission among humans (Paupy et al. 2009; Wong et al. 2013). Because more than half of the world’s population lives in areas where this mosquito species is present, sustained mosquito control efforts are important to prevent outbreaks from these diseases (Kamareddine et al. 2013).

Chemical insecticides have been used intensively as the primary strategy for controlling mosquito populations. However, this strong dependence on insecticides for mosquito control around the world and the use of these chemicals in agriculture have led to environmental pollution and toxic hazards to humans and other non-target organisms (Al-Sarar 2010). The physiological resistance of important mosquito vectors has been widely reported in recent years (Agra-Neto et al. 2014; Bilal et al. 2012; Labbe et al. 2007; Lima et al. 2011; Stenhouse et al. 2013; Zou et al. 2006).

Entomopathogenic fungi, such as Beauveria bassiana and Metarhizium anisopliae, have tremendous potential for use as pest biological control agents, particularly as alternatives to chemical pesticides (Lacey et al. 2001; Lomer et al. 2001). B. bassiana is an environmentally friendly fungus (Roberts and St Leger 2004; Thomas and Read 2007; Wang et al. 2004), and it is widely distributed and has a broad host range towards diverse insect species in nature (Reynolds and Samuels 1996). Many B. bassiana strains have been selected for vector and crop pest control, including house and fruit flies (Dimbi et al. 2003; Lecuona et al. 2005), mosquitoes (Bukhari et al. 2011; Clark et al. 1968; Garcia-Munguia et al. 2011), ticks (Kirkland et al. 2004), locusts, grasshoppers, and termites (Kassa et al. 2004; Mburu et al. 2009). However, the slow killing speed associated with these mycoinsecticides is a major deterrent to their commercial use and large-scale application, and thus they are unable to compete with faster-acting and cheaper chemical insecticides (Amsellem et al. 2002; St Leger et al. 1996).

AaIT is a single-chain neurotoxic polypeptide that is derived from the venom of the buthid scorpion Androctonus australis, and its strict selective toxicity for insects has long been documented (Dee et al. 1990; Zlotkin et al. 2000). It has been reported that the integration of AaIT into M. anisopliae for specific expression in the insect hemolymph after cuticle penetration resulted in 22-, 9-, and 16-fold increases in fungal toxicity to the tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta, the yellow fever mosquito Aedes aegypti, and the coffee berry borer Hypothenemus hampei, respectively (Pava-Ripoll et al. 2008; Wang and St Leger 2007). Similarly, B. bassiana expressing AaIT presented a 15-fold increase in insecticidal activity against Masson’s pine caterpillar Dendrolimus punctatus, and its median lethal times (LT50) against the larvae of D. punctatus and Galleria mellonella were reduced by 24.4 and 40%, respectively (Lu et al. 2008). In this study, we successfully improved the pathogenicity of B. bassiana against A. albopictus by engineering it to express the scorpion neurotoxin AaIT. The virulence of the recombinant fungi against adult A. albopictus (through cuticle penetration or conidia ingestion) and larvae (through conidia ingestion) was significantly improved.

Materials and methods

Mosquitoes

The Foshan (Guangdong, China) strain of A. albopictus originated in Foshan, Guangdong Province, PRC, and it was established in our laboratory in 1981. All mosquitoes, including larval and adult mosquitoes, were maintained in humidified incubators at 25  ±  1 °C on a 12-h light: dark photocycle.

Microbial strains and media

The B. bassiana GIM3.428 strain (wild type, WT) was purchased from Guangdong Microbiology Culture Center and maintained on Czapek’s agar (CDA) (w/v: 3.0% sucrose, 0.3% NaNO3, 0.1% K2HPO4, 0.05% KCl, 0.05% MgSO4·7H2O, 0.001% FeSO4 and 2% agar) at 4 °C for preservation and at 25 °C for colony growth. The WT B. bassiana that was used as the parental strain in this study was sequentially cultured in Sabouraud dextrose broth (SDB) (w/v: 4% glucose, 1% peptone and 1% yeast extract) and glucose-mineral (GM) medium (w/v: 4% glucose, 0.4% NH4NO3, 0.3% KH2PO4 and 0.3% MgSO4) for blastospore production. Escherichia coli Trans-T1 cells (Tansgen, Beijing, CHA), which are used for DNA manipulation, were cultured in Luria–Bertani medium containing 100 µg/ml ampicillin or 50 µg/ml kanamycin.

Gene synthesis and vector construction

The coding sequence of AaIT was synthesized by using B. bassiana-preferred codons and the Mcl1 signal peptide sequence (SP) was incorporated at the 5′ end of it for secretion expression (Genebank accession number: KY914486, Additional file 1: Figure S1a) (Wang and St Leger 2007). The synthesized gene was bracketed with EcoRI and XhoI sites and cloned into pBARGPE1, forming the plasmid pBARGPE1-AaIT (Additional file 1: Figure S1b). This plasmid retains a strong gpdA promoter to drive the insert’s gene expression and Bar resistance coding sequence to express the selectable marker that would provide resistance to phosphinothricin (PPT). The recombinant plasmid pBARGPE1-AaIT was transformed into E. coli Trans-T1 for propagation, followed by isolation with Plasmid Mini Kit I (Omega, Norcross, GA). After it was linearized with ScaI (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA), the plasmid was purified using a Cycle-Pure Kit (Omega, Norcross, GA) and dissolved in dd-H2O at a concentration of 100 ng/µl for blastospore electro-transformation.

Blastospore preparation

Beauveria bassiana conidia formation was triggered by culturing the fungi in SDB with 120 rpm shaking at 25 °C for 48 h, and then 5 ml of this fungal culture was transferred to 50 ml of GM medium for 12 h with shaking under the same conditions. The resulting cultures were filtered through layers of sterile cotton to get rid of the hyphae, and the blastospores were harvested by a 10 min centrifugation cycle at 5000×g and 4 °C, followed by two washes with dd-H2O. The harvested blastospores were suspended with 0.5 ml of 1 M sorbitol and counted with a hemocytometer. Each suspension was mixed with an appropriate amount of 80% sterile glycerol to dilute the blastospore concentration to 1 × 108/ml, and the samples were ultimately stored at −80 °C for sequential use in electro-transformation.

Electroporation

The stored blastospores were precipitated after centrifugation at 5000×g and 4 °C for 5 min, and they were suspended in the mixture containing 10 µl of linearized pBARGPE1-AaIT and 90 µl of ice-cold 1 M sorbitol. The suspension was then transferred into a 0.2 mm prechilled cuvette and pulsed using an electroporator (Bio-Rad, CA, USA) at a field strength of 2 kV cm−1 for 5 ms (milliseconds). The pulsed suspension was transferred into a new Eppendorf tube. The residue in the cuvette was washed twice with 150 µl of 1 M ice-cold sorbitol and 300 µl of washing solution, and the washing solution was also added to the Eppendorf tube. The final suspension was incubated for 2 h at 25 °C and then 150 µl aliquots were smeared on CDA plates containing 150 µg/ml PPT.

Isolation of recombinants

Each transformation product was grown on CDA plates containing 150 µg/ml PPT at 25 °C. The putative recombinants were picked out and subcultured for three generations on CDA with 150 µg/ml PPT. The genomic DNA of every generation was extracted from the 4-day-old colonies according to a documented method (Raeder and Rroda 1985) and used as PCR templates to detect the AaIT gene presence in the recombinants with SP-AaIT-F and SP-AaIT-R primers (5′-CCCAAGCTTATGCGTGAACTTTCTTCGGT-3′ and 5′-CCCTCGAGTTAGTTGATGATGGTGGTAT-3′, respectively). To verify the mitotic stability of their PPT resistance, the recombinants were subcultured for three generations on CDA without PPT at 25 °C, and finally, they were subcultured on CDA with 400 µg/ml PPT at 25 °C. Genomic DNAs were extracted from the 4-day-old colonies from the last subculture and then analyzed by PCR. A stable recombinant strain named Bb-AaIT was selected for the subsequent experiments.

Identification of AaIT expression in Bb-AaIT

The WT and Bb-AaIT strains were grown in CDA for 4 days. Dead female adult mosquitoes that were infected by ingesting WT or Bb-AaIT conidia were maintained at 25 °C at saturated humidity for 4 days. To verify the transcription of AaIT gene in Bb-AaIT, the total RNAs were extracted from the CDA culture supernatant or infected mosquitoes using an RNeasy mini plant kit (Qiagen, Duesseldorf, GER), and they were subjected to reverse transcription with random primers and then PCR with the primers RT-AaIT-F and RT-AaIT-R (5′-CTTTCTTCGGTTCTCGCCCT-3′ and 5′-CCTTATCGGCGTAGTGGACC-3′, respectively).

A polyclonal antibody against AaIT that was expressed by E. coli BL21 (DE3) was derived from rabbits and used to detect the expression of AaIT in the Bb-AaIT or WT grown in CDA or in the infected mosquitoes by western blotting. To verify the translation of AaIT gene in Bb-AaIT, the fungi that were precipitated from the CDA culture supernatant and the infected mosquitoes were ground under liquid nitrogen in mortars for 5 min. Then, 1 ml of cell lysis solution (Beyotime, Shanghai, CHA) was added to the mortars, and the samples were further ground on ice for another 5 min. The ground-up mix was transferred to an Eppendorf tube, and after centrifugation at 12,000 rpm for 5 min, the pellets were reconstituted in sterile ddH2O. The concentrations of the total protein extracts were measured by Nanodrop (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA). Fifty microgram of total protein extracts were loaded for SDS-PAGE, and then western blotting was performed.

Bioassays

The conidia of the Bb-AaIT and WT strains were harvested from the CDA plates with sterile cotton swabs, resuspended in ddH2O, and counted with a hemocytometer. Three bioassays were conducted to compare the virulence of the Bb-AaIT and WT strains to the second-instar larvae of Aedes albopictus infection through conidia ingestion (assay 1), 3-day-old (3 days after emergence) female adult mosquitoes infection through conidia ingestion (assay 2) or through cuticle contact (assay 3). In assay 1, conidia suspensions of 1 × 105 conidia/ml (low), 1 × 106 conidia/ml (middle) and 1 × 107 conidia/ml (high) of Bb-AaIT and WT were added to the cups containing 20 s-instar A. albopictus larvae in 30 ml of double distilled water, respectively. Each treatment was performed in three replicates, and the mortality levels of the larvae were recorded every 24 h for 10 days. In assays 2 and 3, the 3-day-old adult female mosquitoes were anesthetized with a multiunit CO2 anesthetizing system (Vessey et al. 2008). In assay 2, 30 anesthetized female mosquitoes in each group were transferred to the plastic container immediately and fed with 10% glucose containing Bb-AaIT and WT conidia. The conidia had different concentrations of 1 × 106 conidia/ml (low), 1 × 107 conidia/ml (medium) and 1 × 108 conidia/ml (high), respectively, and the control group was fed pure 10% glucose. The tests were conducted in the laboratory at 25 °C. In assay 3, 30 anesthetized female mosquitoes in each group were placed on the 50 cm2 filter paper that had absorbed 3 ml of conidial suspension at 1 × 105 conidia/ml (low), 1 × 106 conidia/ml (middle) and 1 × 107 conidia/ml (high) or 0.02% Tween 80 (control) for 10 s. The mosquitoes were transferred separately to different plastic containers. The contaminated mosquitoes or control mosquitoes were maintained on a 10% glucose diet in plastic containers at 25 °C. Each treatment was performed in three replicates and the mortality levels of the adult female mosquitoes were recorded every 12 h during assays 2 and 3.

A Kaplan–Meier survival analysis and a log-rank test were used to compare the differences between these two strains at three concentrations and to compare the difference between these two strains at each given concentration. A time–concentration–mortality (TCM) model analysis (Feng et al. 1998; Nowierski et al. 1996) was used to calculate the median lethal concentration (LC50) and the median lethal time (LT50) in the treated mosquitoes. All the tests were conducted with IBM SPSS (ver. 20.0) and DPS software (ver. 7.05) (Tang and Feng 2007).

Results

Detection of AaIT gene presence and the mitotic stability of the Bb-AaIT strain

Transformation of the competent blastopores of WT with linearized plasmid pBARGPE1-AaIT produced one transgenic colony on the CDA plate containing 150 µg/ml PPT. The tansformant was able to grow on CDA plate containing 150 µg/ml PPT for three generations. After three rounds of subculturing on PPT-free CDA plates, the tansformant be capable of growing on the CDA plate containing 400 µg/ml PPT. The genomic DNA of the colonies grown on the plate during each generation were extracted and used as PCR templates to detect the presence of the AaIT gene in Bb-AaIT. The expected PCR fragments from all the Bb-AaIT samples appeared on the agarose gel, but not the WT (Additional file 1: Figure S2), which confirmed the consistent heredity of the AaIT gene in the Bb-AaIT genome.

Detection of AaIT expression in the Bb-AaIT strain

The WT and Bb-AaIT strains were grown in CDA for 4 days at 25 °C and precipitated with centrifugation, and they were kept for analysis. The fungal outgrowths were those of a typical B. bassiana, and they appeared on the dead female mosquitoes that were infected through conidial ingestion after being maintained at 25 °C at saturated humidity for 4 days (Fig. 1c). The total RNAs and proteins of the WT and Bb-AaIT from the culture supernatant or infected mosquitoes were extracted and analyzed by RT-PCR (Fig. 1a) or western blotting (Fig. 1b). This result indicated that the recombinant strain expressed the AaIT toxin consistently, but not the WT strain.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Evidence for AaIT expression in the Bb-AaIT strain. a RT-PCR detection of AaIT gene transcription in Bb-AaIT collected from the infected dead mosquitoes and the CDA with positive results, and in the WT control with negative results. The 18S rRNA was detected for the loading control. b Western blot detection of AaIT expression in Bb-AaIT and the WT with a polyclonal antibody against AaIT from different samples. Lane 1, culture supernatant from Bb-AaIT grown in CDA for 4 days with a positive result; Lane 2, culture supernatant from WT grown in CDA for 4 days with a negative result; and Lane 3, the dead female mosquitoes infected by Bb-AaIT and incubated at 25 °C for another 4 days. Lane 4, the dead female mosquitoes infected by the WT and incubated at 25 °C for another 4 days. c The dead female mosquitoes were infected by Bb-AaIT or WT through conidial ingestion. Fungal outgrowths were not observed in the uncultured dead mosquitoes (1 and 3), and typical fungal outgrowths were observed on the dead mosquitoes that were infected by Bb-AaIT (2) and the WT (4) after 4 days of incubation at 25 °C and saturated humidity. Bars, 50 µm

Bioassay results for the Bb-AaIT and WT against larval or adult mosquitoes

Bioassays for the pathogenicity of the Bb-AaIT and WT against the 2-instar larvae and the female adults of Aedes albopictus mosquitoes (through cuticle penetration or conidia ingestion) were conducted at low, middle, and high conidial concentrations. Significant differences were found among the different Bb-AaIT or WT treatment concentrations (Table 1). The mortalities generally increased with the increased conidial concentration and the post-treatment time for both Bb-AaIT and WT (Fig. 2).

Table 1 Results of the log-rank test for the different concentrations of Bb-AaIT or the WT against Aedes albopictus (larval or female adult mosquitoes) in assays 1–3
Fig. 2
figure 2

Survival curves of larval and adult mosquitoes for different Bb-AaIT and WT treatments. a The survival curve of Aedes albopictus larvae when treated with (C1) 1 × 105, (C2) 1 × 106 and (C3) 1 × 107 conidia ml−1 suspensions of Bb-AaIT and the WT. b The survival curve of Aedes albopictus female adults that were infected by conidia ingestion with (C1) 1 × 105, (C2) 1 × 106 and (C3) 1 × 107 conidia ml−1 suspensions of Bb-AaIT and WT. c The survival curve of Aedes albopictus female adults that were infected through cuticle contact with 3 ml of (C1) 1 × 106, (C2) 1 × 107 and (C3) 1 × 108 conidia ml−1 suspensions containing Bb-AaIT and WT that were sprayed on 50 cm2 filter paper

In assay 1, significant differences were found between the mortalities of Bb-AaIT and the WT-treated larvae at each given concentration (Table 1). That is, the larvae that were treated with Bb-AaIT tended to die faster than those treated with the WT (Fig. 2a), and the difference was significant (Table 2). In assays 2 and 3, Bb-AaIT-treated mosquitoes tended to die faster than those treated with the WT at the high concentration and the difference was significant; however, no significant difference was found between the Bb-AaIT and WT-treated adult mosquitoes at the low and middle concentrations (Fig. 2b, c; Table 2).

Table 2 Results of the log-rank test on the different fungal strains Bb-AaIT and WT against Aedes albopictus (larval or female adult mosquitoes) at each given concentration in assays 1–3

The median lethal concentrations were calculated by using the TCM model (Feng et al. 1998; Qin et al. 2010). No significant heterogeneity was detected for each of the fitted TCM relationships (P > 0.05 in Hosmer–Lemeshow tests for the goodness of fit). As a result of the modeling analyses, the LC50s of Bb-AaIT and the WT against the larvae were estimated to be 3.04 × 107 and 9.52 × 109 conidia ml−1 on day 4 and then they decreased to 1.47 × 103 and 1.65 × 104 conidia ml−1 on day 10 (Fig. 3a). For assay 2, the LC50 estimated for Bb-AaIT and the WT against female mosquitoes that were infected through the cuticle dropped from 1.13 × 107 and 4.39 × 107 conidia ml−1 on day 4 to 3.91 × 105 and 8.38 × 105 conidia ml−1 on day 10 (Fig. 3b), respectively. For assay 3, the LC50 estimated for Bb-AaIT and the WT against female mosquitoes infected through conidial ingestion were 1.71 × 108 and 3.26 × 108 conidia ml−1 on day 4, and then decreased to 3.96 × 106 and 9.56 × 106 conidia ml−1 on day 10 (Fig. 3c), respectively. The LC50s of the Bb-AaIT conidia decreased with the treatment time in assays 1, 2 and 3 from 313.3-, 3.9- and 1.9-fold on day 4 to 11.3-, 2.1- and 2.4-fold on day 10, respectively, when compared with those of the WT conidia.

Fig. 3
figure 3

LC50 of WT and Bb-AaIT strains against larval or adult mosquitoes. Error bars: ± SE. Three bioassays were conducted to compare the virulence of the Bb-AaIT and WT strains as follows: a assay 1, the second-instar larvae of Aedes albopictus infection through conidia ingestion. (b, c) 3-day-old (3 days after emergence) female adult mosquito infection through cuticle contact (b, assay 2) or through conidia ingestion (c, assay 3)

The median lethal times were estimated by using the TCM model. The LT50s of Bb-AaIT and WT could not be calculated at the low concentration because no more than half the quantity of lethal larvae or adult mosquitoes could be observed at the final time. The LT50 trends for Bb-AaIT were lower than those of the WT at the middle and high concentrations in the three assays. For instance, the LT50s of the treated larvae were 7.7 and 6.7 days for the WT and 5.5 and 4.4 days for Bb-AaIT at the middle and high concentrations, respectively (Table 3). The LT50s for Bb-AaIT were reduced by 28.6 and 34.3% at these two concentrations in assay 1 when compared with that of WT. The LT50s of the treated adult female mosquitoes at the middle and high concentrations were 9.9 and 6.2 days for the WT and 8.8 and 4.2 days for Bb-AaIT, respectively, in assay 2, 9.8 and 6.2 days for WT and 7.5 and 4.7 days for Bb-AaIT, in assay 3 (Table 3). The LT50 differences between the two strains reached 11.1, and 32.3% in assay 2 and 23.5 and 24.2% in assay 3 at middle and high concentrations, respectively, but no significant difference was found for the middle concentration from both assays. This difference indicated the substantial impact of the expressed AaIT toxin on the survival of the tested larvae and adult mosquitoes.

Table 3 The median lethal times (LT50s) of the fungal strains Bb-AaIT and WT against Aedes albopictus (larval or female adult mosquitoes) at middle and high concentrations in assays 1–3

Discussion

The insect-specific toxin AaIT is toxic to larval and adult mosquitoes (Dee et al. 1990; Higgs et al. 1995), and it specifically affects the voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs) in insects (Gurevitz et al. 2007). Although VGSCs in different taxa show high similarities, AaIT exhibits high specific sensitivity to insects and distinguishes between insects and mammals, which makes it particularly well-suited for the development of safe bioinsecticides (Zlotkin et al. 2000). AaIT induces the fast excitatory paralysis caused by a presynaptic effect, or the induction of a repetitive firing in the terminal branches of the insect’s motor nerves, which results in the massive and uncoordinated stimulation of the respective skeletal muscles (Gurevitz et al. 2007; Zlotkin et al. 2000). The adult mosquitoes that were infected by M. anisopliae expressing AaIT demonstrated pre-lethal effects including spasmodic leg and wing movements several hours before death, and they invariably died with extended wings, which is indicative of the muscle contraction resulting from AaIT (Wang and St Leger 2007).

In this study, the amino acid sequence of the AaIT protein was obtained from the Swiss-Prot database. In the optimized sequence, we used the preferred codons of B. bassiana to encode all of the given amino acids, which would improve the gene expression level (Elena et al. 2014). The coding sequence of AaIT was synthesized and cloned into pBARGPE1 (Additional file 1: Figure S1b). The strong gpdA promoter can drive the exogenous gene expression efficiently, which had been extensively and successfully applied for the transgenic gene expression in M. anisopliae and B. bassiana (Lu et al. 2008; St et al. 1996). Furthermore, the AaIT gene was genetically induced into the genome of the wild type B. bassiana to enhance its virulence to mosquitoes, and the mitotically stable transformant Bb-AaIT could successfully express this exogenous toxin. The virulence of Bb-AaIT and the wild type to larval (with infection through conidia ingestion) or adult mosquitoes (infection through cuticle or conidia ingestion) were compared at low, middle and high concentrations by survival analysis. For both Bb-AaIT and the WT, the virulence was increased with the increase in the concentration, and the difference was significant. Bb-AaIT-treated larvae tended to die faster than those treated with the WT at each given concentration; and Bb-AaIT-treated adult mosquitoes only died faster than those treated with the WT at the high concentration. The difference was significant.

The TCM modeling can reflect the integrity and objectivity of the bioassay data, which accounts for the effects of the conidial concentration and post-treatment time as well as the interaction of both variables (Feng et al. 1998; Nowierski et al. 1996). The robust TCM modeling analysis clearly differentiated the LC50 and LT50 trends in Bb-AaIT and the WT during the three bioassays on larvae and adult mosquitoes. In terms of the LC50, Bb-AaIT was substantially improved in terms of virulence compared to the WT strain. With the same treatments, the LT50s of the Bb-AaIT strain at the middle and high conidial concentrations were shortened by 11.1–34.3%, respectively, compared to the WT strain. Apparently, the higher level of virulence and the faster action of Bb-AaIT were attributed to the insecticidal activity of the AaIT that was expressed in the ingested conidia. In other words, the Bb-AaIT strain was capable of killing the larvae by ingesting the conidia in suspension and killing adult mosquitoes through both cuticle infection and conidia ingestion at a higher efficiency than the wild-type strain.

When fungal spores are applied to an aquatic habitat, which is typical for mosquito larvae, the nutrients in the water are usually sufficient for stimulating the germination of the spores following water intake (Bukhari et al. 2011; Hegedus and Khachatourians 1995). The scorpion toxin should be delivered into the insect circulatory system since it acts upon the injection of the scorpion venom into the prey or enemy (Matsumoto et al. 2014). For mosquito larvae, the primary path of infection was through the feeding, respiratory apparatus (Miranpuri and Khachatourians 1991) or cuticle. In this study, after the mosquito larvae were infected by Bb-AaIT, the scorpion toxin AaIT was delivered into the hemolymph by spore germination, which sped up the death of the mosquito larvae. When adult mosquitoes were exposed to Bb-AaIT by body contact, the fungal infection started from the adhesion of the conidia to the host cuticle, followed by germination and cuticle penetration into the hemocoel (Feng et al. 1994). Similarly, the expression of AaIT accelerated the death of adult mosquitoes. Moreover, when the adult mosquitoes were infected by feeding on 10% glucose solution containing Bb-AaIT conidia, the AaIT was expressed and released into the midgut environment by the ingested conidia, which accelerated the death of the infected adult mosquitoes (Matsumoto et al. 2014).

The effective use of fungi as bio-insecticides is largely dependent on the persistent activity of fungal spray residues, which can be influenced by some factors including the formulation, substrate, fungal isolate, UV radiation and the prevailing abiotic conditions (Acharya et al. 2015; Blanford 2012; Darbro and Thomas 2009; Jackson et al. 2010; Jaronski 2010; Jenkins and Thomas 1996; Morleydavies et al. 1996). A recent study stated that the persistence of B. bassiana products was reduced in the field compared with that observed in the laboratory; conidia remained viable for up to 3 months under laboratory conditions, but for only 1–2 weeks in the field (Acharya et al. 2015). An appropriate formulation is needed to ensure the even distribution of conidia throughout the treated area and to improve the persistent activity of conidia that were exposed to various environmental conditions. In this study, the transgenic strain (Bb-AaIT) was found to be significantly effective at controlling larval and adult mosquitoes. However, additional studies are required to find an appropriate formulation to exert the maximum potential entomopathogenic activity of Bb-AaIT against mosquitoes.

In conclusion, our study demonstrated that the virulence of wild type B. bassiana can be improved significantly by introducing the insect-specific toxin gene AaIT into the genome to express the exogenous toxin in the fungus. This recombinant B. bassiana was valuable for mosquito control, and even for other pest control.