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Amplification of DNA from preserved specimens shows blowflies were preadapted for the rapid evolution of insecticide resistance

Authors :
C. J. Hartley
R. D. Newcomb
R. J. Russell
C. G. Yong
J. R. Stevens
D. K. Yeates
J. La Salle
J. G. Oakeshott
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 103:8757-8762
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006.

Abstract

Mutations of esterase 3 confer two forms of organophosphate resistance on contemporary Australasian Lucilia cuprina . One form, called diazinon resistance, is slightly more effective against commonly used insecticides and is now more prevalent than the other form, called malathion resistance. We report here that the single amino acid replacement associated with diazinon resistance and two replacements associated with malathion resistance also occur in esterase 3 in the sibling species Lucilia sericata , suggesting convergent evolution around a finite set of resistance options. We also find parallels between the species in the geographic distributions of the polymorphisms: In both cases, the diazinon-resistance change is absent or rare outside Australasia where insecticide pressure is lower, whereas the changes associated with malathion resistance are widespread. Furthermore, PCR analysis of pinned specimens of Australasian L. cuprina collected before the release of organophosphate insecticides reveals no cases of the diazinon-resistance change but several cases of those associated with malathion resistance. Thus, the early outbreak of resistance in this species can be explained by the preexistence of mutant alleles encoding malathion resistance. The pinned specimen analysis also shows much higher genetic diversity at the locus before organophosphate use, suggesting that the subsequent sweep of diazinon resistance in Australasia has compromised the scope for the locus to respond further to the ongoing challenge of the insecticides.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e97a98eb5b0ed0cd013e53928dd3cf94