Insecticides
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Transcript Insecticides
Insecticides
Application of cellular neuroscience to a
practical problem
Assessment
Jan 2011, Exam
approximately
8 short answer Questions
total of 70 marks,
the other 30 marks will accrue from the
practical writeup.
Cellular Neuroscience Revision
Resting potential
Action potential
Channels:
voltage
gated,
ligand gated, ionotropic & metabotropic
Chemical synaptic transmission
Aims of lecture
to know problems of effective application
of insecticides
to know the main types of insecticides
to know their site(s) of action
possible mechanisms of resistance
Reading Matters
Papers and web sites
http://biolpc22.york.ac.uk/404
Book:
Tomlin,
CD S (1997) The pesticide manual
Delivering insecticide
effectively?
rapidity
specificity
to
target species
side effects
stability
light
& air (oxygen)
not too persistent
solubility
cheap
Main targets
development
ecdysis
[moulting] specific to insects
cuticle specific to insects
respiration
CNS
Why Knockdown
resting insects have low metabolic demand
unlike
mammals
general respiratory or muscular poisons not
so good?
knockdown insecticides
disable
insect quickly
OK to kill slowly
target CNS
Main classes
organochlorine (1940s)
cyclodiene
organophosphorus
pyrethroids (1975-)
Imidacloprid (1990s)
phenyl pyrazoles
Organophosphorus
example: malathion
carbamates have similar action
more toxic to insects
phosphorylate acetylcholinesterase
raises [ACh], so use atropine as antidote if
humans are poisoned
Organophosphorus
phosphate group, with two CH3 / C2H5
and one longer side chain
often S replaces O
malathion
Phosphorylate
acetylcholinesterase
active site of enzyme has
serine - OH
active site binds P from phosphate
half
acetylcholine
like very long (80 min)
maloxon
More toxic to insects
Insects
oxidase much more
toxic
OP
cytochrome
P450 oxidase in
mitochondria, etc
Vertebrates
carboxyesterase
non-toxic
OP
Carbamates also related
originally derived from calabar beans in W
Africa
aldicarb LD50 5mg/kg
Cyclodiene
e.g. Dieldrin, Lindane
once widely used
like other
organochlorines, very
lipid soluble
Cyclodiene mode of
dieldrin
action
affects GABAA which
carry Cl- currents
binds to picrotoxin
site
not GABA site
enhances current
faster desensitisation
GABA induced Cl- current
Cyclodiene sensitivity
insects are more sensitive
to GABAA insecticides
because
receptor is a pentamer
the b-subunit binds the
insecticide
insect homooligomer b3
receptors
mammals have
heterooligomer a b g
Phenyl pyrazoles
fipronil
also
targets GABAA
receptors
same site as
Lindane
Organochlorine
DDT
low solubility in water, high in lipids
at main peak of use, Americans ate
0.18mg/day
human
mass 80kg
Na Channel effect
more toxic to insects
DDT
symptoms of
poisoning are
bursty discharges
Na current effect
Na current is slower to end in DDT
orange bar marks stimulus
Pyrethroids
very quick knockdown
need an oxidase inhibitor
photostable and effective
30g/hectare
(1% of previous insecticides\)
Pyrethroids
major current
insecticide
derived from
chrysanthemum
Na channel effect
more toxic because of
differences in Na
sequence
may also have other
effects ?
typically esters of
chrysanthemic acid
typical pyrethroids ...
aromatic rings & Cl
or Br contribute to
toxicity
Deltamethrin
most toxic
No CN
CN next to ester bond
hyperexcitation hypersensitive
convulsions
paralysis
Na channel effect
single voltage
Sodium current lasts
longer
Voltage clamp
Note tail current
voltage series
control
tetramethrin
Na channel effect - ii
Unitary sodium
current lasts longer
patch clamp
type II open even less
often but for even
longer
more toxic because
of differences in Na channel sequence
rat mutant isoleucine methionine in
intracellular loop of domain 2 (I874M)
other effects ?
Pyrethroids have been reported to affect
calcium
channels
GABA, ACh, glutamate receptors
Imidacloprid
newer nicotinic
binds to ACh
receptor
Imidacloprid ii
stimulate nerve and record EPSP
apply carbamylcholine
Summary so far
Na+ channels targets of DDT, pyrethroids
AChEsterase targets of OPs
ACh receptor target of Imidacloprid
GABAA receptor target of cyclodienes &
fipronil
Problem of Resistance
resistance means that the insects survive!
some species never develop,
e.g.
tsetse flies - few offspring
most very quick
e.g.
mosquitoes - rapid life, many offspring
cross resistance, e.g. to DDT and
pyrethroids because same target is used.
[behavioural resistance]
Resistance mechanisms
organophosphates
organochlorine
cyclodiene
pyrethroids
Organophosphates
carboxylesterase genes
amplified
e.g. in mosquito, Culex, up to
250 x copies of gene/cell
carboxylesterase gene mutated
higher kinetics and affinity
(Tribolium)
detoxified by
glutathione-Stransferases (i.e.
addition of
glutathione)
Organochlorine
DDT detoxified by
glutathione-Stransferases (i.e. addition
of glutathione)
Na channel resistance
Cyclodiene
target site change known as Rdl
resistance
to dieldrin
GABAA receptor
302 serine [or glycine]
change affects cyclodiene, picrotoxin
binding
and reduces
desensitisation
alanine
Pyrethroids
non-target resistance P450 oxidase
more
transcription giving more expression
leads to cross-resistance to
organophosphates & carbamates
target resistance Na+ channel
+
Na
channel
kdr : leucine alanine (L1014F)
9
Musca strains
super-kdr : methionine threonine (M918T)
Effect on currents
M918T blocks current completely
Comparative mutations
Key Questions
how do insecticides kill insects ?
why are insecticides more toxic to insects
than mammals?
how do insects develop resistance?
Conclusions
Cellular neuroscience helps understand
many insecticide actions
binding to channel proteins
ligand-gated
voltage
gated
mutation leads to resistance
target
site
enzymatic degradation
Web page
http://biolpc22.york.ac.uk/404/