4.6 Article

Altered GPI modification of insect AChE improves tolerance to organophosphate insecticides

Journal

INSECT BIOCHEMISTRY AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 3, Pages 150-158

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ibmb.2010.11.005

Keywords

Olive fruit fly; Acetylcholinesterase; C-terminal peptide; Glycophosphatidylinositol anchor; OP resistance

Funding

  1. General Secretariat of Research and Technology of the Ministry of Development, Greece
  2. Department of Biochemistry and Biotechnology of the University of Thessaly
  3. European Union

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The olive fruit fly Bactrocera oleae is the most destructive and intractable pest of olives. The management of B. oleae has been based on the use of organophosphate (OP) insecticides, a practice that induced resistance. OP-resistance in the olive fly was previously shown to be associated with two mutations in the acetyl-cholinesterase (AChE) enzyme that, apparently, hinder the entrance of the OP into the active site. The search for additional mutations in the ace gene that encodes AChE revealed a short deletion of three glutamines (Delta 3Q) from a stretch of five glutamines, in the C-terminal peptide that is normally cleaved and substituted by a GPI anchor. We verified that AChEs from B. oleae and other Dipterans are actually GPI-anchored, although this is not predicted by the big-PI algorithm. The Delta 3Q mutation shortens the unusually long hydrophilic spacer that follows the predicted GPI attachment site and may thus improve the efficiency of GPI anchor addition. We expressed the wild type B. oleae AChE, the natural mutant Delta 3Q and a constructed mutant lacking all 5 consecutive glutamines (Delta 5Q) in COS cells and compared their kinetic properties. All constructs presented identical K-m and k(cat) values, in agreement with the fact that the mutations did not affect the catalytic domain of the enzyme. In contrast, the mutants produced higher AChE activity, suggesting that a higher proportion of the precursor protein becomes GPI-anchored. An increase in the number of GPI-anchored molecules in the synaptic cleft may reduce the sensitivity to insecticides. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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