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Whats plan B?
Mosquitoes
are getting better at evading pest control
for long mosquitoes have been resisting
pest control. They are only getting better at it. From 1977
to 1997, India spent more than a quarter of its health budget
on malaria control. Yet it remains a formidable public health
challenge in the country.
A Nigeria-based study by scientists at
the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine focuses on the mosquito
Anopheles gambiae, one of the most important vectors of malaria
in Sub-Saharan Africa. The parasite (Plasmodium sp) this vector
carries, causes up to 3 million deaths worldwide. To make
matters worse, this vector has turned resistant to pyrethroids
in more ways than one. Pyrethroids are the chemicals used
as insecticides.
Mosquitoes resist pesticides via metabolic
resistance or knockdown resistance (kdr). The first occurs
when insects develop internal enzymes, such as monooxygenase,
to break insecticides down into non-toxic forms. Altered target-site
resistance or knockdown resistance (kdr), is brought about
by a structural mutation of the targeted site.
Samples of the mosquito were collected
from two places in Nigeria: Ipokia, where resistance to pyrethroids
has been reported and Alakia, where they are still susceptible.
Half of the Ipokia sample was exposed to an enzyme inhibitor
and pyrethroids (permethrin or deltamethrin), while the other
half was exposed to pyrethroids alone. The Alakia sample was
exposed only to pyrethroids.
The Alakia samples were 100 percent susceptible.
The Ikopia strain of both halves showed 58 per cent mortality
to permethrin and 72 per cent to deltamethrin. This showed
how resistant Anopheles gambiae has become to insecticides
in Ipokia. On exposure to the enzyme inhibitor, it used the
kdr mechanism to save itself. The sample not exposed to the
inhibitor revealed high levels of monooxygenase as compared
to the Alakia sample. Enhanced enzyme levels led to enhanced
resistance. There is much insecticide pressure on mosquitoes
from Ipokia than Alakia and this could be the reason for the
observed difference, said Awolola Samson, one of the authors
of the paper.
This study, published online in
the September 2008 issue of Transactions of the Royal Society
of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, calls for strategies to
curtail pyrethroid resistance.
Source: Down
To Earth,
Date:
March, 2009

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