Abstract

BackgroundAcaricide resistance is a central problem for the control of the cattle tick Rhipicephalus microplus. The physiological effects and phenotypes of the mutations that cause acaricide resistance are not always well understood or characterized. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that confer cypermethrin knockdown resistance (kdr) have been reported in R. microplus. These SNPs have been associated and correlated with pyrethroid resistance although there is no direct physiological evidence that their presence does confer kdr in this organism.MethodsResistant and susceptible strain resistance profiles were obtained using the larval packet discriminating dose assay. The relevant genomic regions of the para-sodium channel were amplified using standard PCR; SNPs were detected by sequencing the corresponding amplicons. Ovary response to cypermethrin exposure/treatment was evaluated using videometrical analysis.ResultsWe found that the pyrethroid resistance trait is stable in a resistant reference strain after years without selection, suggesting that the resistance conferring mutations are fixed in the population. In this strain, a change in the structure of the pre-synaptic para-sodium channel caused by the G184C, the C190A and the T2134A SNPs appears to confer resistance. These mutations are absent in the susceptible strain used as control. We demonstrate that cypermethrin blocks ovary contraction in cypermethrin-susceptible ticks. We also show that ovaries from organisms that carry the kdr associated SNPs still contract at cypermethrin concentrations that completely block ovary contraction in the susceptible strain. The configuration of the experimental system excludes a xenobiotic detoxification mechanism.ConclusionsThis is the first report that presents physiological evidence that the presence of the G184C, the C190A, and the T2134A mutations in the para-sodium channel correlates with maintaining muscle contractility in R. microplus exposed to cypermethrin. These SNPs may confer cypermethrin resistance in this organism by avoiding presynaptic blockage, inhibiting the flaccid muscle paralysis characteristic of this acaricide. The videometric assay that we previously validated can be used to detect more rapidly than other assays that involve larval mortality kdr-like cypermethrin resistant tick strains, permitting to directly assay adult pre-engorged females after they are collected on the field without waiting until eggs are laid and larvae eclose.

Highlights

  • Acaricide resistance is a central problem for the control of the cattle tick Rhipicephalus microplus

  • History of the toxicological profile of the San Alfonso multi‐resistant strain The resistant reference tick strain used in this work was first reported in 2002 by the “Centro Nacional de Servicios de Constatación en Salud Animal” (CONASAGSAGARPA SENASICA-Secretaria de Agricultura y Desarrollo Rural (SADER), México)

  • The resistance indexes to pyrethroids of the San Alfonso strain were so high that they could not be estimated because mortality did not occur at the discriminating doses [23]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Acaricide resistance is a central problem for the control of the cattle tick Rhipicephalus microplus. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that confer cypermethrin knockdown resistance (kdr) have been reported in R. microplus. These SNPs have been associated and correlated with pyrethroid resistance there is no direct physiological evidence that their presence does confer kdr in this organism. Type II pyrethroids are toxins that bind to the arthropod para-type-sodium channel inducing flaccid paralysis [1]. Several single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the gene that codes for the para-sodium channel that result in the substitution of single amino acids in its protein sequence have been reported to confer pyrethroid resistance in many arthropods. Homologous mutations in R. microplus correlate with pyrethroid resistance but in this organism, no measurable physiological effect that correlates with the presence of these mutations and resistance has been reported. The G184C and the T2134A mutations occur only in resistant populations and are always genetically linked [13,14,15,16,17]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call