High resolution genetic mapping uncovers chitin synthase-1 as the target-site of the structurally diverse mite growth inhibitors clofentezine, hexythiazox and etoxazole in Tetranychus urticae
Demaeght, Peter | Osborne, Edward J. | Odman-Naresh, Jothini | Grbić, Miodrag | Nauen, Ralf | Merzendorfer, Hans | Clark, Richard M. | Van Leeuwen, Thomas | Research Foundation - Flanders | National Institutes of Health (US) | Genome Canada | Ontario Genomics Institute | Ghent University | Lower Saxony State Government | Government of Canada | Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas [https://ror.org/02gfc7t72]
The acaricides clofentezine, hexythiazox and etoxazole are commonly referred to as 'mite growth inhibitors', and clofentezine and hexythiazox have been used successfully for the integrated control of plant mite pests for decades. Although they are still important today, their mode of action has remained elusive. Recently, a mutation in chitin synthase 1 (CHS1) was linked to etoxazole resistance. In this study, we identified and investigated a Tetranychus urticae strain (HexR) harboring recessive, monogenic resistance to each of hexythiazox, clofentezine, and etoxazole. To elucidate if there is a common genetic basis for the observed cross-resistance, we adapted a previously developed bulk segregant analysis method to map with high resolution a single, shared resistance locus for all three compounds. This finding indicates that the underlying molecular basis for resistance to all three compounds is identical. This locus is centered on the CHS1 gene, and as supported by additional genetic and biochemical studies, a non-synonymous variant (I1017F) in CHS1 associates with resistance to each of the tested acaricides in HexR. Our findings thus demonstrate a shared molecular mode of action for the chemically diverse mite growth inhibitors clofentezine, hexythiazox and etoxazole as inhibitors of an essential, non-catalytic activity of CHS1. Given the previously documented cross-resistance between clofentezine, hexythiazox and the benzyolphenylurea (BPU) compounds flufenoxuron and cycloxuron, CHS1 should be also considered as a potential target-site of insecticidal BPUs.
Показать больше [+] Меньше [-]TVL is a post-doctoral fellow of the Fund for Scientific Research Flanders (FWO). EJO was supported by National Institutes of Health Genetics Training Grant T32 GM07464. JO-N was supported by a Lichtenberg fellowship of the State of Lower Saxonia, Germany. This work was supported by FWO grant 3G061011 and 3G009312 and a Ghent University Special Research Fund Grant 01J13711, the Government of Canada through Genome Canada and the Ontario Genomics Institute OGI-046, and internal funding from the University of Utah. The authors thank Dr. Michael E. Beck (Bayer CropScience) for computing Fukui functions, and Andre Kurlovs for CHS1 genotypes of North American mite strains.
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