Abstract

BackgroundInsecticide resistance of Anopheles stephensi, the main malaria vector in eastern Afghanistan, has been reported previously. This study describes the biochemical and molecular mechanisms of resistance to facilitate effective vector control and insecticide resistance management.MethodsMosquito larvae were collected from the provinces of Kunar, Laghman and Nangarhar from 2014 to 2017. The susceptibility of the reared 3–4 days old adults was tested with deltamethrin 0.05%, bendiocarb 0.1%, malathion 5%, permethrin 0.75% and DDT 4%. Cytochrome P450 content and general esterase, glutathione S-transferase (GST) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activities were measured in the three field populations and the results were compared with those of the laboratory susceptible An. stephensi Beech strain. Two separate allele-specific PCR assays were used to identify L1014, L1014F and L1014S mutations in the voltage gated sodium channel gene of An. stephensi. Probit analysis, ANOVA and Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium were used to analyse bioassay, biochemical assay and gene frequency data respectively.ResultsThe population of An. stephensi from Kunar was susceptible to bendiocarb, apart from this, all populations were resistant to all the other insecticides tested. The differences between all values for cytochrome P450s, general esterases, GSTs and AChE inhibition rates in the Kunar, Laghman and Nangarhar populations were statistically significant when compared to the Beech strain, excluding GST activities between Kunar and Beech due to the high standard deviation in Kunar. The three different sodium channel alleles [L1014 (wild type), L1014F (kdr west) and L1014S (kdr east)] were all segregated in the Afghan populations. The frequencies of kdr east mutation were 22.9%, 32.7% and 35% in Kunar, Laghman and Nangarhar populations respectively. Kdr west was at the lowest frequency of 4.44%.ConclusionsResistance to different groups of insecticides in the field populations of An. stephensi from Kunar, Laghman and Nangarhar Provinces of Afghanistan is caused by a range of metabolic and site insensitivity mechanisms, including esterases, cytochrome P450s and GSTs combined with AChE and sodium channel target site insensitivity. The intensity and frequency of these mechanisms are increasing in these populations, calling for urgent reorientation of vector control programmes and implementation of insecticide resistance management strategies.

Highlights

  • Insecticide resistance of Anopheles stephensi, the main malaria vector in eastern Afghanistan, has been reported previously

  • Bioassay Considering the susceptibility threshold of a mortality rate above 98%, only one population of An. stephensi from Kunar was susceptible to bendiocarb and the Laghman and Nangarhar populations were resistant to all insecticides tested

  • The contents of cytochrome P450s and the levels of activities of general esterases, glutathione S-transferases and the insensitivity of acetylcholinesterase are increasing in these populations

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Summary

Introduction

Insecticide resistance of Anopheles stephensi, the main malaria vector in eastern Afghanistan, has been reported previously. Malaria is a major endemic vector borne disease in Afghanistan. There are 6 potential malaria vector species, Anopheles stephensi is the major vector in the eastern provinces of Kunar, Laghman and Nangarhar [2,3,4]. This species is common in the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent extending to South China and Myanmar [5]. In Afghanistan, the malaria control is reliant on indoor residual spraying (IRS) with deltamethrin, or more recently bendiocarb, combined with distribution of LNs mostly PermaNet [6, 7]. During 2007–2016 over 2 million deltamethrin-treated LNs were distributed in Kunar, Laghman and Nangarhar [6], with a top up distribution of 45,000 LNs in Kunar and Laghman Provinces in 2017 [6]

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