Cargando…

Malaria vectors resistance to insecticides in Benin: current trends and mechanisms involved

BACKGROUND: Insecticides are widely used to control malaria vectors and have significantly contributed to the reduction of malaria-caused mortality. In addition, the same classes of insecticides were widely introduced and used in agriculture in Benin since 1980s. These factors probably contributed t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gnanguenon, Virgile, Agossa, Fiacre R, Badirou, Kefilath, Govoetchan, Renaud, Anagonou, Rodrigue, Oke-Agbo, Fredéric, Azondekon, Roseric, AgbanrinYoussouf, Ramziath, Attolou, Roseline, Tokponnon, Filemon T, Aïkpon, Rock, Ossè, Razaki, Akogbeto, Martin C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4395909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25886599
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-015-0833-2
_version_ 1782366508747325440
author Gnanguenon, Virgile
Agossa, Fiacre R
Badirou, Kefilath
Govoetchan, Renaud
Anagonou, Rodrigue
Oke-Agbo, Fredéric
Azondekon, Roseric
AgbanrinYoussouf, Ramziath
Attolou, Roseline
Tokponnon, Filemon T
Aïkpon, Rock
Ossè, Razaki
Akogbeto, Martin C
author_facet Gnanguenon, Virgile
Agossa, Fiacre R
Badirou, Kefilath
Govoetchan, Renaud
Anagonou, Rodrigue
Oke-Agbo, Fredéric
Azondekon, Roseric
AgbanrinYoussouf, Ramziath
Attolou, Roseline
Tokponnon, Filemon T
Aïkpon, Rock
Ossè, Razaki
Akogbeto, Martin C
author_sort Gnanguenon, Virgile
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Insecticides are widely used to control malaria vectors and have significantly contributed to the reduction of malaria-caused mortality. In addition, the same classes of insecticides were widely introduced and used in agriculture in Benin since 1980s. These factors probably contributed to the selection of insecticide resistance in malaria vector populations reported in several localities in Benin. This insecticide resistance represents a threat to vector control tool and should be monitored. The present study reveals observed insecticide resistance trends in Benin to help for a better management of insecticide resistance. METHODS: Mosquito larvae were collected in eight sites and reared in laboratory. Bioassays were conducted on the adult mosquitoes upon the four types of insecticide currently used in public health in Benin. Knock-down resistance, insensitive acetylcholinesterase-1 resistance, and metabolic resistance analysis were performed in the mosquito populations based on molecular and biochemical analysis. The data were mapped using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) with Arcgis software. RESULTS: Mortalities observed with Deltamethrin (pyrethroid class) were less than 90% in 5 locations, between 90-97% in 2 locations, and over 98% in one location. Bendiocarb (carbamate class) showed mortalities ranged 90-97% in 2 locations and were over 98% in the others locations. A complete susceptibility to Pirimiphos methyl and Fenitrothion (organophosphate class) was observed in all locations with 98-100% mortalities. Knock-down resistance frequencies were high (0.78-0.96) and similar between Anopheles coluzzii, Anopheles gambiae, Anopheles arabiensis, and Anopheles melas. Insensitive acetylcholinesterase-1 was rare (0.002-0.1) and only detected in Anopheles gambiae in concomitance with Knock-down resistance mutation. The maps showed a large distribution of Deltamethrin resistance, Knock-down mutation and metabolic resistance throughout the country, a suspected resistance to Bendiocarb and detection of insensitive acetylcholinesterase-1 from northern Benin, and a wide distribution of susceptible vectors to Pirimiphos methyl and Fenitrothion. CONCLUSION: This study showed a widespread resistance of malaria vectors to pyrethroid previously located in southern Benin, an early emergence of carbamates resistance from northern Benin and a full susceptibility to organophosphates. Several resistance mechanisms were detected in vectors with a potential cross resistance to pyrethroids through Knock-down and metabolic resistance mechanisms.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4395909
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-43959092015-04-14 Malaria vectors resistance to insecticides in Benin: current trends and mechanisms involved Gnanguenon, Virgile Agossa, Fiacre R Badirou, Kefilath Govoetchan, Renaud Anagonou, Rodrigue Oke-Agbo, Fredéric Azondekon, Roseric AgbanrinYoussouf, Ramziath Attolou, Roseline Tokponnon, Filemon T Aïkpon, Rock Ossè, Razaki Akogbeto, Martin C Parasit Vectors Research BACKGROUND: Insecticides are widely used to control malaria vectors and have significantly contributed to the reduction of malaria-caused mortality. In addition, the same classes of insecticides were widely introduced and used in agriculture in Benin since 1980s. These factors probably contributed to the selection of insecticide resistance in malaria vector populations reported in several localities in Benin. This insecticide resistance represents a threat to vector control tool and should be monitored. The present study reveals observed insecticide resistance trends in Benin to help for a better management of insecticide resistance. METHODS: Mosquito larvae were collected in eight sites and reared in laboratory. Bioassays were conducted on the adult mosquitoes upon the four types of insecticide currently used in public health in Benin. Knock-down resistance, insensitive acetylcholinesterase-1 resistance, and metabolic resistance analysis were performed in the mosquito populations based on molecular and biochemical analysis. The data were mapped using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) with Arcgis software. RESULTS: Mortalities observed with Deltamethrin (pyrethroid class) were less than 90% in 5 locations, between 90-97% in 2 locations, and over 98% in one location. Bendiocarb (carbamate class) showed mortalities ranged 90-97% in 2 locations and were over 98% in the others locations. A complete susceptibility to Pirimiphos methyl and Fenitrothion (organophosphate class) was observed in all locations with 98-100% mortalities. Knock-down resistance frequencies were high (0.78-0.96) and similar between Anopheles coluzzii, Anopheles gambiae, Anopheles arabiensis, and Anopheles melas. Insensitive acetylcholinesterase-1 was rare (0.002-0.1) and only detected in Anopheles gambiae in concomitance with Knock-down resistance mutation. The maps showed a large distribution of Deltamethrin resistance, Knock-down mutation and metabolic resistance throughout the country, a suspected resistance to Bendiocarb and detection of insensitive acetylcholinesterase-1 from northern Benin, and a wide distribution of susceptible vectors to Pirimiphos methyl and Fenitrothion. CONCLUSION: This study showed a widespread resistance of malaria vectors to pyrethroid previously located in southern Benin, an early emergence of carbamates resistance from northern Benin and a full susceptibility to organophosphates. Several resistance mechanisms were detected in vectors with a potential cross resistance to pyrethroids through Knock-down and metabolic resistance mechanisms. BioMed Central 2015-04-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4395909/ /pubmed/25886599 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-015-0833-2 Text en © Gnanguenon et al.; licensee BioMed Central. 2015 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Gnanguenon, Virgile
Agossa, Fiacre R
Badirou, Kefilath
Govoetchan, Renaud
Anagonou, Rodrigue
Oke-Agbo, Fredéric
Azondekon, Roseric
AgbanrinYoussouf, Ramziath
Attolou, Roseline
Tokponnon, Filemon T
Aïkpon, Rock
Ossè, Razaki
Akogbeto, Martin C
Malaria vectors resistance to insecticides in Benin: current trends and mechanisms involved
title Malaria vectors resistance to insecticides in Benin: current trends and mechanisms involved
title_full Malaria vectors resistance to insecticides in Benin: current trends and mechanisms involved
title_fullStr Malaria vectors resistance to insecticides in Benin: current trends and mechanisms involved
title_full_unstemmed Malaria vectors resistance to insecticides in Benin: current trends and mechanisms involved
title_short Malaria vectors resistance to insecticides in Benin: current trends and mechanisms involved
title_sort malaria vectors resistance to insecticides in benin: current trends and mechanisms involved
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4395909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25886599
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-015-0833-2
work_keys_str_mv AT gnanguenonvirgile malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT agossafiacrer malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT badiroukefilath malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT govoetchanrenaud malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT anagonourodrigue malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT okeagbofrederic malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT azondekonroseric malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT agbanrinyoussouframziath malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT attolouroseline malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT tokponnonfilemont malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT aikponrock malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT osserazaki malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved
AT akogbetomartinc malariavectorsresistancetoinsecticidesinbenincurrenttrendsandmechanismsinvolved