Martinez Luis A, Imami Ahmed, de Jong Enzo, Romaine Ian M, Zwiebel Laurence J
Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
Vanderbilt Institute for Chemical Biology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
Pest Manag Sci. 2025 Jan;81(1):185-195. doi: 10.1002/ps.8421. Epub 2024 Sep 22.
The development of economically viable and environmentally neutral tools to control insects that consume or damage over 20% of global agriculture or vector human and animal disease represents one of the most important challenges of the 21st century. The suite of chemical-based strategies currently employed to control insect populations rely primarily on insecticides, which are subject to rapid resistance and often have harmful off-target environmental and health-related impacts, and, to a lesser degree, repellents, which typically rely on masking attractive odors. The discovery and characterization of Vanderbilt University allosteric agonists (VUAAs), a family of small-molecule agonists that target the highly conserved, insect-specific odorant receptor coreceptor (Orco), raise the potential for the development of a novel repellent paradigm for vector/pest management. VUAAs have the potential to target nearly all insect olfactory sensory neurons, leading to highly aversive behavioral responses, but importantly have limited volatility, thereby reducing their utility as spatial repellents.
We have characterized VUAA thermolysis components and identified a suite of volatiles (VUAA-based active ingredients, VUAIs) that act specifically in novel binary combinations as robust and long-lasting spatial repellents against Anopheline mosquitoes. In mobility-based behavioral experiments, VUAIs act synergistically as effective spatial repellents and outperform parent VUAA compounds against host-seeking Anopheline mosquitoes.
VUAIs are volatile alternatives to Vanderbilt University allosteric agonists (VUAAs) that have the potential for use as spatial repellents in disease vector and agricultural pest control. The repellency observed is odorant receptor coreceptor (Orco)-dependent, supporting the hypothesis that VUAIs and VUAAs similarly target an allosteric Orco recognition site. © 2024 The Author(s). Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry.
开发经济可行且环境友好型工具以控制消耗或破坏全球超过20%农业产量的昆虫,或控制传播人类和动物疾病的病媒昆虫,是21世纪最重要的挑战之一。目前用于控制昆虫种群的一系列基于化学的策略主要依赖杀虫剂,而杀虫剂容易迅速产生抗性,并且往往会对非目标环境和健康产生有害影响;在较小程度上依赖驱避剂,驱避剂通常依靠掩盖吸引性气味发挥作用。范德堡大学变构激动剂(VUAAs)是一类靶向高度保守的昆虫特异性气味受体共同受体(Orco)的小分子激动剂,对其的发现和表征为病媒/害虫管理新型驱避范式的开发带来了潜力。VUAAs有可能靶向几乎所有昆虫嗅觉感觉神经元,从而引发高度厌恶的行为反应,但重要的是其挥发性有限,因此降低了它们作为空间驱避剂的效用。
我们已对VUAA热解成分进行了表征,并鉴定出一组挥发物(基于VUAA的活性成分,VUAIs),这些挥发物以新颖的二元组合形式发挥作用,作为针对按蚊的强效且持久的空间驱避剂。在基于移动性的行为实验中,VUAIs作为有效的空间驱避剂发挥协同作用,并且在针对寻找宿主的按蚊方面比母体VUAA化合物表现更优。
VUAIs是范德堡大学变构激动剂(VUAAs)的挥发性替代物,有潜力用作病媒和农业害虫控制中的空间驱避剂。观察到的驱避作用是气味受体共同受体(Orco)依赖性的,支持了VUAIs和VUAAs类似地靶向变构Orco识别位点的假设。© 2024作者。《害虫管理科学》由约翰·威利父子有限公司代表化学工业协会出版。