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Three chemosensory proteins enriched in antennae and tarsi of Rhaphuma horsfieldi differentially contribute to the binding of insecticides.

Authors :
Yao, Yu-Juan
Yin, Ning-Na
Pu, Lin-Mei
Yang, An-Jing
Liu, Nai-Yong
Source :
Pesticide Biochemistry & Physiology. Feb2024, Vol. 199, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Antennae and legs (primarily the tarsal segments) of insects are the foremost sensory organs that contact a diverse range of toxic chemicals including insecticides. Binding proteins expressed in the two tissues are potential molecular candidates serving as the binding and sequestering of insecticides, like chemosensory proteins (CSPs). Insect CSPs endowed with multiple roles have been suggested to participate in insecticide resistance, focusing mainly on moths, aphids and mosquitos. Yet, the molecular underpinnings underlying the interactions of cerambycid CSPs and insecticides remain unexplored. Here, we present binding properties of three antenna- and tarsus-enriched RhorCSPs (RhorCSP1, CSP2 and CSP3) in Rhaphuma horsfieldi to eight insecticide classes totaling 15 chemicals. From the transcriptome of this beetle, totally 16 CSP-coding genes were found, with seven full-length sequences. In phylogeny, these RhorCSPs were distributed dispersedly in different clades. Expression profiles revealed the abundant expression of RhorCSP1 , CSP2 and CSP3 in antennae and tarsi, thus as representatives for studying the protein-insecticide interactions. Binding assays showed that the three RhorCSPs were tuned differentially to insecticides but exhibited the highest affinities with hexaflumuron, chlorpyrifos and rotenone (dissociation constants <13 μM). In particular, RhorCSP3 could interact strongly with 10 of tested insecticides, of which four residues (Tyr25, Phe42, Val65 and Phe68) contributed significantly to the binding of six, four, three and four ligands, respectively. Of these, the binding of four mutated RhorCSP3s to a botanical insecticide rotenone was significantly weakened compared to the wildtype protein. Furthermore, we also evidenced that RhorCSP3 was a broadly-tuned carrier protein in response to a wide variety of plant odorants outside insecticides. Altogether, our findings shed light on different binding mechanisms and odorant-tuning profiles of three RhorCSPs in R. horsfieldi and identify key residues of the RhorCSP3-insecticide interactions. [Display omitted] • RhorCSP1 , CSP2 and CSP3 genes in Rhaphuma horsfieldi were highly enriched in antennae and tarsi. • Three RhorCSPs exhibited different odorant-tuning profiles and binding abilities to insecticides. • Residues Tyr25, Phe42, Val65 and Phe68 significantly weakened the binding of RhorCSP3 to some insecticides. • RhorCSP3 could be tuned broadly to various insecticides and plant odorants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00483575
Volume :
199
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Pesticide Biochemistry & Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175871648
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pestbp.2024.105797