Substrate promiscuity of key resistance P450s confers clothianidin resistance while increasing chlorfenapyr potency in malaria vectors.

Magellan Tchouakui, Sulaiman S. Ibrahim, Mersimine K. Mangoua, Riccado F. Thiomela, Tatiane Assatse, Sonia L. Ngongang-Yipmo, Abdullahi Muhammad, Leon J.M. Mugenzi, Benjamin Menze, Themba Mzilahowa, Charles Wondji

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Novel insecticides were recently introduced to counter pyrethroid resistance threats in African malaria vectors. To prolong their effectiveness, potential cross-resistance from promiscuous pyrethroid metabolic resistance mechanisms must be elucidated. Here, we demonstrate that the duplicated P450s CYP6P9a/-b, proficient pyrethroid metabolizers, reduce neonicotinoid efficacy in Anopheles funestus while enhancing the potency of chlorfenapyr. Transgenic expression of CYP6P9a/-b in Drosophila confirmed that flies expressing both genes were significantly more resistant to neonicotinoids than controls, whereas the contrasting pattern was observed for chlorfenapyr. This result was also confirmed by RNAi knockdown experiments. In vitro expression of recombinant CYP6P9a and metabolism assays established that it significantly depletes both clothianidin and chlorfenapyr, with metabolism of chlorfenapyr producing the insecticidally active intermediate metabolite tralopyril. This study highlights the risk of cross-resistance between pyrethroid and neonicotinoid and reveals that chlorfenapyr-based control interventions such as Interceptor G2 could remain efficient against some P450-based resistant mosquitoes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number114566
Pages (from-to)114566
JournalCell Reports
Volume43
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Jul 2024

Keywords

  • Anopheles funestus
  • chlorfenapyr
  • CP: Microbiology
  • cross-resistance
  • CYP6P9a and CYP6P9b
  • experimental huts
  • insecticide resistance markers
  • malaria
  • metabolism assay
  • neonicotinoid
  • RNA interference

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