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Activation of Drosophila sodium channels promotes modification by deltamethrin. Reductions in affinity caused by knock-down resistance mutations.

Authors :
Vais H
Williamson MS
Goodson SJ
Devonshire AL
Warmke JW
Usherwood PN
Cohen CJ
Source :
The Journal of general physiology [J Gen Physiol] 2000 Mar; Vol. 115 (3), pp. 305-18.
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

kdr and super-kdr are mutations in houseflies and other insects that confer 30- and 500-fold resistance to the pyrethroid deltamethrin. They correspond to single (L1014F) and double (L1014F+M918T) mutations in segment IIS6 and linker II(S4-S5) of Na channels. We expressed Drosophila para Na channels with and without these mutations and characterized their modification by deltamethrin. All wild-type channels can be modified by <10 nM deltamethrin, but high affinity binding requires channel opening: (a) modification is promoted more by trains of brief depolarizations than by a single long depolarization, (b) the voltage dependence of modification parallels that of channel opening, and (c) modification is promoted by toxin II from Anemonia sulcata, which slows inactivation. The mutations reduce channel opening by enhancing closed-state inactivation. In addition, these mutations reduce the affinity for open channels by 20- and 100-fold, respectively. Deltamethrin inhibits channel closing and the mutations reduce the time that channels remain open once drug has bound. The super-kdr mutations effectively reduce the number of deltamethrin binding sites per channel from two to one. Thus, the mutations reduce both the potency and efficacy of insecticide action.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022-1295
Volume :
115
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of general physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
10694259
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.115.3.305