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Allelic Variation of Cytochrome P450s Drives Resistance to Bednet Insecticides in a Major Malaria Vector

Scale up of Long Lasting Insecticide Nets (LLINs) has massively contributed to reduce malaria mortality across Africa. However, resistance to pyrethroid insecticides in malaria vectors threatens its continued effectiveness. Deciphering the detailed molecular basis of such resistance and designing di...

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Autores principales: Ibrahim, Sulaiman S., Riveron, Jacob M., Bibby, Jaclyn, Irving, Helen, Yunta, Cristina, Paine, Mark J. I., Wondji, Charles S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4627800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26517127
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005618
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author Ibrahim, Sulaiman S.
Riveron, Jacob M.
Bibby, Jaclyn
Irving, Helen
Yunta, Cristina
Paine, Mark J. I.
Wondji, Charles S.
author_facet Ibrahim, Sulaiman S.
Riveron, Jacob M.
Bibby, Jaclyn
Irving, Helen
Yunta, Cristina
Paine, Mark J. I.
Wondji, Charles S.
author_sort Ibrahim, Sulaiman S.
collection PubMed
description Scale up of Long Lasting Insecticide Nets (LLINs) has massively contributed to reduce malaria mortality across Africa. However, resistance to pyrethroid insecticides in malaria vectors threatens its continued effectiveness. Deciphering the detailed molecular basis of such resistance and designing diagnostic tools is critical to implement suitable resistance management strategies. Here, we demonstrated that allelic variation in two cytochrome P450 genes is the most important driver of pyrethroid resistance in the major African malaria vector Anopheles funestus and detected key mutations controlling this resistance. An Africa-wide polymorphism analysis of the duplicated genes CYP6P9a and CYP6P9b revealed that both genes are directionally selected with alleles segregating according to resistance phenotypes. Modelling and docking simulations predicted that resistant alleles were better metabolizers of pyrethroids than susceptible alleles. Metabolism assays performed with recombinant enzymes of various alleles confirmed that alleles from resistant mosquitoes had significantly higher activities toward pyrethroids. Additionally, transgenic expression in Drosophila showed that flies expressing resistant alleles of both genes were significantly more resistant to pyrethroids compared with those expressing the susceptible alleles, indicating that allelic variation is the key resistance mechanism. Furthermore, site-directed mutagenesis and functional analyses demonstrated that three amino acid changes (Val(109)Ile, Asp(335)Glu and Asn(384)Ser) from the resistant allele of CYP6P9b were key pyrethroid resistance mutations inducing high metabolic efficiency. The detection of these first DNA markers of metabolic resistance to pyrethroids allows the design of DNA-based diagnostic tools to detect and track resistance associated with bednets scale up, which will improve the design of evidence-based resistance management strategies.
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spelling pubmed-46278002015-11-06 Allelic Variation of Cytochrome P450s Drives Resistance to Bednet Insecticides in a Major Malaria Vector Ibrahim, Sulaiman S. Riveron, Jacob M. Bibby, Jaclyn Irving, Helen Yunta, Cristina Paine, Mark J. I. Wondji, Charles S. PLoS Genet Research Article Scale up of Long Lasting Insecticide Nets (LLINs) has massively contributed to reduce malaria mortality across Africa. However, resistance to pyrethroid insecticides in malaria vectors threatens its continued effectiveness. Deciphering the detailed molecular basis of such resistance and designing diagnostic tools is critical to implement suitable resistance management strategies. Here, we demonstrated that allelic variation in two cytochrome P450 genes is the most important driver of pyrethroid resistance in the major African malaria vector Anopheles funestus and detected key mutations controlling this resistance. An Africa-wide polymorphism analysis of the duplicated genes CYP6P9a and CYP6P9b revealed that both genes are directionally selected with alleles segregating according to resistance phenotypes. Modelling and docking simulations predicted that resistant alleles were better metabolizers of pyrethroids than susceptible alleles. Metabolism assays performed with recombinant enzymes of various alleles confirmed that alleles from resistant mosquitoes had significantly higher activities toward pyrethroids. Additionally, transgenic expression in Drosophila showed that flies expressing resistant alleles of both genes were significantly more resistant to pyrethroids compared with those expressing the susceptible alleles, indicating that allelic variation is the key resistance mechanism. Furthermore, site-directed mutagenesis and functional analyses demonstrated that three amino acid changes (Val(109)Ile, Asp(335)Glu and Asn(384)Ser) from the resistant allele of CYP6P9b were key pyrethroid resistance mutations inducing high metabolic efficiency. The detection of these first DNA markers of metabolic resistance to pyrethroids allows the design of DNA-based diagnostic tools to detect and track resistance associated with bednets scale up, which will improve the design of evidence-based resistance management strategies. Public Library of Science 2015-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4627800/ /pubmed/26517127 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005618 Text en © 2015 Ibrahim et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ibrahim, Sulaiman S.
Riveron, Jacob M.
Bibby, Jaclyn
Irving, Helen
Yunta, Cristina
Paine, Mark J. I.
Wondji, Charles S.
Allelic Variation of Cytochrome P450s Drives Resistance to Bednet Insecticides in a Major Malaria Vector
title Allelic Variation of Cytochrome P450s Drives Resistance to Bednet Insecticides in a Major Malaria Vector
title_full Allelic Variation of Cytochrome P450s Drives Resistance to Bednet Insecticides in a Major Malaria Vector
title_fullStr Allelic Variation of Cytochrome P450s Drives Resistance to Bednet Insecticides in a Major Malaria Vector
title_full_unstemmed Allelic Variation of Cytochrome P450s Drives Resistance to Bednet Insecticides in a Major Malaria Vector
title_short Allelic Variation of Cytochrome P450s Drives Resistance to Bednet Insecticides in a Major Malaria Vector
title_sort allelic variation of cytochrome p450s drives resistance to bednet insecticides in a major malaria vector
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4627800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26517127
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005618
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