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Organophosphorus insecticide interacts with the pheromone-binding proteins of Athetis lepigone: Implication for olfactory dysfunction

Authors :
Fan Zhang
Xiaohui Yuan
Xiao-Min Wu
Ya-Nan Zhang
Ji-Wei Xu
Youssef Dewer
Ding-Ze Mang
Xiu-Yun Zhu
Lu-Lu Li
Xiao-Chun Zhang
Lu Xu
Xiao-Qing Zhang
Source :
Journal of hazardous materials. 397
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Athetis lepigone is one of the most severe polyphagous pests, and it has developed resistance to different chemical insecticides. Insects primarily rely on the olfactory system to recognize various environmental chemicals, including xenobiotics such as insecticides. Here, we expressed two A. lepigone pheromone-binding proteins (AlepPBP2 and AlepPBP3), and observed they had higher binding affinities to phoxim than other insecticides, with Ki was 3.30 ± 0.38 μM and 3.27 ± 0.10 μM, respectively. Molecular dynamics simulation, binding mode analysis, and computational alanine scanning showed that six residues (Phe15, Phe39, Ile55, Leu65, Ile97, and Phe122) of AlepPBP2 and three residues (Phe12, Ile52, and Ile134) of AlepPBP3 maybe as potential residues that can change protein ability to bind an organophosphorus insecticide phoxim. Then, we used site-directed mutagenesis assay to mutate these residues into alanine, respectively. Subsequently, the binding assays displayed that Phe15, Phe39, and Ile97 of AlepPBP2, Phe12 and Ile134 of AlepPBP3 caused a significant decrease of AlepPBPs binding ability to phoxim, suggesting they should play crucial roles in the AlepPBPs/phoxim interactions. Our findings could further advance in using PBPs as unique targets to design and develop precise and environmentally-friendly pest control agents with high insecticidal potential using a computer-aided drug design (CADD) approach.

Details

ISSN :
18733336
Volume :
397
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of hazardous materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9112fb2f3c471babbd0ea82af6c9aaab