Odorant-binding protein-based identification of natural spatial repellents for the African malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae

There is increasing interest in the development of effective mosquito repellents of natural origin to reduce transmission of diseases such as malaria and yellow fever. To achieve this we have employed an in vitro competition assay involving odorant-binding proteins (OBPs) of the malaria mosquito, An...

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Veröffentlicht in:Insect biochemistry and molecular biology 2018-05, Vol.96, p.36-50
Hauptverfasser: Kröber, Thomas, Koussis, Konstantinos, Bourquin, Martine, Tsitoura, Panagiota, Konstantopoulou, Maria, Awolola, Taiwo Sam, Dani, Francesca R., Qiao, Huili, Pelosi, Paolo, Iatrou, Kostas, Guerin, Patrick M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There is increasing interest in the development of effective mosquito repellents of natural origin to reduce transmission of diseases such as malaria and yellow fever. To achieve this we have employed an in vitro competition assay involving odorant-binding proteins (OBPs) of the malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae, with a predominantly female expression bias to identify plant essential oils (EOs) containing bioactive compounds that target mosquito olfactory function. EOs and their fractions capable of binding to such OBPs displayed repellence against female mosquitoes in a laboratory repellent assay. Repellent EOs were subjected to gas chromatographic analysis linked to antennogram (EAG) recordings from female A. gambiae to identify the biologically active constituents. Among these compounds cumin alcohol, carvacrol, ethyl cinnamate and butyl cinnamate proved as effective as DEET at an equivalent dose in the repellent assay, and combinations of carvacrol with either butyl cinnamate or cumin alcohol proved to be significantly more effective than DEET in the assay. When tested as spatial repellents in experimental shelters housing sleeping humans in northern Nigeria a binary mixture of carvacrol plus cumin alcohol caused mosquitoes to leave shelters in significantly higher numbers to those induced by DEET in female Anopheles spp. and in numbers equivalent to that of DEET in Culex spp. mosquitoes. These findings indicate an approach for the identification of biologically active molecules of natural origin serving as repellents for mosquitoes. [Display omitted] •There is a need for repellents of natural origin that target the mosquito olfactory system.•Competition assays identified plant essential oils that bind to mosquito odorant binding proteins.•Bioactive essential oil constituents were identified by gas chromatography linked mosquito antennogram recordings.•Carvacrol, cumin alcohol, ethyl and butyl cinnamate showed repellence in a laboratory assay.•Product mixtures showed spatial repellence against different mosquito species in human shelters in Africa.
ISSN:0965-1748
1879-0240
DOI:10.1016/j.ibmb.2018.03.008