Abstract

BackgroundNADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) plays a central role in cytochrome P450 action. The genes coding for P450s are not yet fully identified in the bed bug, Cimex lectularius. Hence, we decided to clone cDNA and knockdown the expression of the gene coding for CPR which is suggested to be required for the function of all P450s to determine whether or not P450s are involved in resistance of bed bugs to insecticides.Methodology/Principal FindingsThe full length Cimex lectularius CPR (ClCPR) cDNA was isolated from a deltamethrin resistant bed bug population (CIN-1) using a combined PCR strategy. Bioinformatics and in silico modeling were employed to identify three conserved binding domains (FMN, FAD, NADP), a FAD binding motif, and the catalytic residues. The critical amino acids involved in FMN, FAD, NADP binding and their putative functions were also analyzed. No signal peptide but a membrane anchor domain with 21 amino acids which facilitates the localization of ClCPR on the endoplasmic reticulum was identified in ClCPR protein. Phylogenetic analysis showed that ClCPR is closer to the CPR from the body louse, Pediculus humanus corporis than to the CPRs from the other insect species studied. The ClCPR gene was ubiquitously expressed in all tissues tested but showed an increase in expression as immature stages develop into adults. We exploited the traumatic insemination mechanism of bed bugs to inject dsRNA and successfully knockdown the expression of the gene coding for ClCPR. Suppression of the ClCPR expression increased susceptibility to deltamethrin in resistant populations but not in the susceptible population of bed bugs.Conclusions/SignificanceThese data suggest that P450-mediated metabolic detoxification may serve as one of the resistance mechanisms in bed bugs.

Highlights

  • During the past ten years, the bed bug has rapidly resurfaced throughout the world [1,2,3]

  • A partial putative Cimex lectularius CPR (ClCPR) cDNA fragment was amplified from deltamethrin resistant population, CIN-1, by multiple PCR amplifications using degenerate primers, NADPHF and NADPHR designed based on cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) sequences identified in other insect species (Table S2)

  • The ClCPR gene was isolated from a deltamethrin resistant population (CIN-1) with a combined PCR strategy (Fig. S1)

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Summary

Introduction

During the past ten years, the bed bug has rapidly resurfaced throughout the world [1,2,3]. Our previous studies determined a causal link between two identified knockdown resistance (kdr) mutations and deltamethrin resistance in bed bug populations, indicating decreased target-site sensitivity of voltagegated sodium channels as one of the mechanisms of pyrethroid resistance. PBO, a P450 inhibitor, suppressed deltamethrin resistance in CIN-1 population [8] These data suggest that cytochrome P450-mediated metabolic detoxification might be a principal mechanism responsible for deltamethrin resistance in some bed bug populations. We decided to clone cDNA and knockdown the expression of the gene coding for CPR which is suggested to be required for the function of all P450s to determine whether or not P450s are involved in resistance of bed bugs to insecticides

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