A sensory appendage protein protects malaria vectors from pyrethroids
Pyrethroid-impregnated bed nets have driven considerable reductions in malaria-associated morbidity and mortality in Africa since the beginning of the century 1 . The intense selection pressure exerted by bed nets has precipitated widespread and escalating resistance to pyrethroids in African Anophe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2020-01, Vol.577 (7790), p.376-380 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Pyrethroid-impregnated bed nets have driven considerable reductions in malaria-associated morbidity and mortality in Africa since the beginning of the century
1
. The intense selection pressure exerted by bed nets has precipitated widespread and escalating resistance to pyrethroids in African
Anopheles
populations, threatening to reverse the gains that been made by malaria control
2
. Here we show that expression of a sensory appendage protein (SAP2), which is enriched in the legs, confers pyrethroid resistance to
Anopheles gambiae
. Expression of
SAP2
is increased in insecticide-resistant populations and is further induced after the mosquito comes into contact with pyrethroids.
SAP2
silencing fully restores mortality of the mosquitoes, whereas
SAP2
overexpression results in increased resistance, probably owing to high-affinity binding of SAP2 to pyrethroid insecticides. Mining of genome sequence data reveals a selective sweep near the
SAP2
locus in the mosquito populations of three West African countries (Cameroon, Guinea and Burkina Faso) with the observed increase in haplotype-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms mirroring the increasing resistance of mosquitoes to pyrethroids reported in Burkina Faso. Our study identifies a previously undescribed mechanism of insecticide resistance that is likely to be highly relevant to malaria control efforts.
The leg-enriched sensory appendage protein, SAP2, confers pyrethroid resistance to
Anopheles gambiae
, through high-affinity binding of pyrethroid insecticides; an observed selective sweep in field mosquitoes mirrors the increasing resistance reported in Africa. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41586-019-1864-1 |