Mitchell Sara N, Rigden Daniel J, Dowd Andrew J, Lu Fang, Wilding Craig S, Weetman David, Dadzie Samuel, Jenkins Adam M, Regna Kimberly, Boko Pelagie, Djogbenou Luc, Muskavitch Marc A T, Ranson Hilary, Paine Mark J I, Mayans Olga, Donnelly Martin J
Department of Vector Biology, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2014 Mar 27;9(3):e92662. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0092662. eCollection 2014.
The development of resistance to insecticides has become a classic exemplar of evolution occurring within human time scales. In this study we demonstrate how resistance to DDT in the major African malaria vector Anopheles gambiae is a result of both target-site resistance mechanisms that have introgressed between incipient species (the M- and S-molecular forms) and allelic variants in a DDT-detoxifying enzyme. Sequencing of the detoxification enzyme, Gste2, from DDT resistant and susceptible strains of An. gambiae, revealed a non-synonymous polymorphism (I114T), proximal to the DDT binding domain, which segregated with strain phenotype. Recombinant protein expression and DDT metabolism analysis revealed that the proteins from the susceptible strain lost activity at higher DDT concentrations, characteristic of substrate inhibition. The effect of I114T on GSTE2 protein structure was explored through X-ray crystallography. The amino acid exchange in the DDT-resistant strain introduced a hydroxyl group nearby the hydrophobic DDT-binding region. The exchange does not result in structural alterations but is predicted to facilitate local dynamics and enzyme activity. Expression of both wild-type and 114T alleles the allele in Drosophila conferred an increase in DDT tolerance. The 114T mutation was significantly associated with DDT resistance in wild caught M-form populations and acts in concert with target-site mutations in the voltage gated sodium channel (Vgsc-1575Y and Vgsc-1014F) to confer extreme levels of DDT resistance in wild caught An. gambiae.
对杀虫剂产生抗性已成为在人类时间尺度内发生进化的一个典型例子。在本研究中,我们证明了非洲主要疟疾媒介冈比亚按蚊对滴滴涕的抗性是起始物种(M型和S型分子形式)之间渗入的靶标位点抗性机制以及滴滴涕解毒酶中等位基因变异共同作用的结果。对冈比亚按蚊抗滴滴涕和敏感品系的解毒酶Gste2进行测序,发现靠近滴滴涕结合域的一个非同义多态性(I114T),它与品系表型相关。重组蛋白表达和滴滴涕代谢分析表明,敏感品系的蛋白在较高滴滴涕浓度下失去活性,这是底物抑制的特征。通过X射线晶体学研究了I114T对GSTE2蛋白结构的影响。抗滴滴涕品系中的氨基酸交换在疏水的滴滴涕结合区域附近引入了一个羟基。这种交换不会导致结构改变,但预计会促进局部动力学和酶活性。在果蝇中表达野生型和114T等位基因都能提高对滴滴涕的耐受性。114T突变与野外捕获的M型群体中的滴滴涕抗性显著相关,并与电压门控钠通道(Vgsc-1575Y和Vgsc-1014F)中的靶标位点突变协同作用,使野外捕获的冈比亚按蚊具有极高水平的滴滴涕抗性。