Pyrethroid-impregnated bednets are playing an increasing role for combating malaria, especially in stable malaria areas. More than 90% of the current annual malaria incidence (c. 500 million clinical cases with up to 2 million deaths) is in Africa where the major vector is Anopheles gambiae s.s. As pyrethroid resistance has been reported in this mosquito, reliable and simple techniques are urgently needed to characterize and monitor this resistance in the field. In insects, an important mechanism of pyrethroid resistance is due to a modification of the voltage-gated sodium channel protein recently shown to be associated with mutations of the para-type sodium channel gene. We demonstrate here that one of these mutations is present in certain strains of pyrethroid resistant A. gambiae s.s. and describe a PCR-based diagnostic test allowing its detection in the genome of single mosquitoes. Using this test, we found this mutation in six out of seven field samples from West Africa, its frequency being closely correlated with survival to pyrethroid exposure. This diagnostic test should bring major improvement for field monitoring of pyrethroid resistance, within the framework of malaria control programmes.
In some insect species, knockdown resistance (kdr) to pyrethroids and DDT is linked to point mutations in the sequence of the para-type voltage-dependent sodium channel gene. The effects of pyrethroids were assayed on six Culex pipiens strains: two were susceptible to pyrethroids and the four others displayed various levels of resistance, but, in each case, a kdr-type mechanism was strongly suggested. Degenerate primers were designed on the basis of the corresponding sequences of the para orthologous gene reported from several orders of insects. These primers were used to amplify the region of the sodium channel gene which includes the positions where the kdr and super-kdr mutations have been found in Musca domestica. As expected, the ampli®ed fragment was highly homologous to the para sequences. The super-kdr-like mutation (methionine to threonine at position 918 of the M domestica para sequence) was never detected in any strain. In contrast, the same kdr mutation (leucine to phenylalanine at position 1014) was present in some Culex pyrethroid-resistant samples. An alternative substitution of the same leucine to a serine was detected in one strain slightly resistant to pyrethroids but highly resistant to DDT. These data have allowed us to design a PCR-based diagnostic test on genomic DNA to determine the presence or the absence of the kdr allele in single C pipiens collected in several countries. The validity of this test was checked by comparing the frequency of the resistance allele and the toxicological data.
The insect midgut is the primary target site for Bt-derived insecticides and Bt alternatives. However, despite extensive recent study, the precise role and nature of different Bt receptors remains a subject of considerable debate. This problem is fuelled by a lack of understanding of the genes expressed in the insect midgut and their physiological roles. The poplar leaf beetle, Chrysomela tremulae, is an important model for understanding the mode of action of, and resistance to, coleopteran-specific Bt toxins and currently shows the only known naturally occurring case of resistance to Cry3A toxins. Moreover it belongs to the same family as the corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera, an economically important beetle pest and target of hybrid corn expressing Cry3 toxins. Pyrosequencing is a fast and efficient way of defining the transcriptome of specific insect tissues such as the larval midgut. Here we use 454 based pyrosequencing to sample the larval midgut transcriptome of C. tremulae. We identify candidate genes of putative Bt receptors including transcripts encoding cadherin-like proteins, aminopeptidase N and alkaline phosphatase. We also describe a wealth of new transcripts predicting rapidly evolving gene families involved in plant tissue digestion, which have no homologs in the genome of the stored product pest the Red Flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum.
The mosquitocidal activity of Bacillus sphaericus is because of a binary toxin (Bin), which binds to Culex pipiens maltase 1 (Cpm1), an ␣-glucosidase present in the midgut of Culex pipiens larvae. In this work, we studied the molecular basis of the resistance to Bin developed by a strain (GEO) of C. pipiens. Immunohistochemical and in situ hybridization experiments showed that Cpm1 was undetectable in the midgut of GEO larvae, although the gene was correctly transcribed. The sequence of the cpm1GEO cDNA differs from the sequence we previously reported for a susceptible strain (cpm1IP) by seven mutations: six missense mutations and a mutation leading to the premature termination of translation. When produced in insect cells, Cpm1IP was attached to the membrane by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI). In contrast, the premature termination of translation of Cpm1GEO resulted in the targeting of the protein to the extracellular compartment because of truncation of the GPI-anchoring site. The interaction between Bin and Cpm1GEO and the enzyme activity of the receptor were not affected. Thus, Bin is not toxic to GEO larvae because it cannot interact with the midgut cell membrane, even though its receptor site is unaffected. This mechanism contrasts with other known resistance mechanisms in which point mutations decrease the affinity of binding between the receptor and the toxin. E nvironmentally safe toxins produced by Bacillus thuringiensis and͞or Bacillus sphaericus have been integrated in management programs to control crop pests such as Heliothis virescens and Plutella xylostella, and disease vectors such as the mosquitoes Anopheles gambiae and Culex pipiens (1, 2). However, the potential benefits of these biopesticides may be rapidly lost because of the proliferation of highly resistant insect populations (3-6). Control strategies to delay or prevent the development of resistance have been developed, based on several assumptions. The most important of these assumptions are that the resistance gene is recessive and that the rate of mutation to generate resistance alleles is low. Currently, it is difficult to evaluate the success of these strategies because we lack adequate methods for monitoring resistance alleles because of our very restricted knowledge of the mechanisms of resistance to bioinsecticides. Bacillus sphaericus is toxic to mosquitoes, mainly because it produces a binary toxin (Bin) in crystals during sporulation. Following the ingestion and solubilization of crystals by larvae, the released toxin is activated and interacts with the brushborder membrane of the midgut epithelium. In a previous study, we reported the partial purification of a Bin-binding protein from IP, a susceptible strain of C. pipiens. This receptor displayed sequence similarity to ␣-glucosidases and other maltase-like proteins, and was thus named Cpm1, for Culex pipiens maltase 1 (7). We recently isolated the cDNA encoding Cpm1 from IP larvae (cpm1 IP ) and showed that Cpm1 has ␣-glucosidase activity when produced in bacteria (8). ...
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