A <i>6.5kb</i> Intergenic Structural Variation Exacerbates the Fitness Cost of P450-Based Metabolic Resistance in the Major African Malaria Vector <i>Anopheles funestus</i>

Metabolic-based resistance to insecticides limit the control of medically important pests, and it is extremely detrimental in the ongoing struggle to control disease vectors. Elucidating the fitness cost of metabolic resistance in major malaria vectors is vital for successful resistance management....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Magellan Tchouakui, Leon M. J. Mugenzi, Murielle J. Wondji, Micareme Tchoupo, Flobert Njiokou, Charles S. Wondji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-04-01
Series:Genes
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4425/13/4/626
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Summary:Metabolic-based resistance to insecticides limit the control of medically important pests, and it is extremely detrimental in the ongoing struggle to control disease vectors. Elucidating the fitness cost of metabolic resistance in major malaria vectors is vital for successful resistance management. We established the fitness cost of the <i>6.5kb</i> structural variant (<i>6.5kb-sv</i>) between the duplicated <i>CYP6P9a/b</i> P450s using the hybrid strain generated from the crossing between two <i>An. funestus</i> laboratory strains. Furthermore, we assessed the cumulative impact of this marker with the duplicated P450 genes. We established that individuals that were homozygote for the resistant structural variant (SV) presented reduced fecundity and slow development relative to those that were homozygote for the susceptible SV. Furthermore, we observed that <i>6.5kb</i> act additively with <i>CYP6P9a</i> and <i>CYP6P9b</i> to exacerbate the reduced fecundity and the increased development time of resistant mosquitoes since double/triple homozygote susceptible (SS/SS/SS) significantly laid more eggs and developed faster than other genotypes. Moreover, a restoration of susceptibility was noted over 10 generations in the insecticide-free environment with an increased proportion of susceptible individuals. This study highlights the negative impact of multiple P450-based resistance on the key physiological traits of malaria vectors. Such high fitness costs suggest that in the absence of selection pressure, the resistant individuals will be outcompeted in the field. Therefore, this should encourage future strategies based on the rotation of insecticides to reduce selection pressure and to slow the spread of pyrethroid resistance.
ISSN:2073-4425