4.6 Article

Discovery of mosquitocides from fungal extracts through a high-throughput cytotoxicity-screening approach

Journal

PARASITES & VECTORS
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13071-021-05089-3

Keywords

Mosquito; Vector-borne diseases; Pesticides; Penicillium toxicarium; Anopheles gambiae

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AI125657]
  2. National Science Foundation [1742644]
  3. Jiangxi Province Natural Science Foundation, China [20192ACB20008]
  4. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences [1742644] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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A high-throughput screening approach was developed to discover new mosquitocides from fungal extracts, with a candidate extract from Penicillium toxicarium showing high toxicity to mosquito larvae and adults. This study showcases the effectiveness of the screening method and the potential for further development of these fungal extracts as mosquitocides.
Background: Mosquitoes transmit a variety of diseases. Due to widespread insecticide resistance, new effective pesticides are urgently needed. Entomopathogenic fungi are widely utilized to control pest insects in agriculture. We hypothesized that certain fungal metabolites may be effective insecticides against mosquitoes. Methods: A high-throughput cytotoxicity-based screening approach was developed to search for insecticidal compounds in our newly established global fungal extract library. We first determined cell survival rates after adding various fungal extracts. Candidate insecticides were further analyzed using traditional larval and adult survival bioassays. Results: Twelve ethyl acetate extracts from a total of 192 fungal extracts displayed > 85% inhibition of cabbage looper ovary cell proliferation. Ten of these 12 candidates were confirmed to be toxic to Anopheles gambiae Sua5B cell line, and six showed > 85% inhibition of Anopheles mosquito cell growth. Further bioassays determined a LC50, the lethal concentration that kills 50% of larval or adult mosquitoes, of 122 mu g/mL and 1.7 mu g/mosquito, respectively, after 24 h for extract 76F6 from Penicillium toxicarium. Conclusions: We established a high-throughput MTT-based cytotoxicity screening approach for the discovery of new mosquitocides from fungal extracts. We discovered a candidate extract from P. toxicarium that exhibited high toxicity to mosquito larvae and adults, and thus were able to demonstrate the value of our recently developed approach. The active fungal extracts discovered here are ideal candidates for further development as mosquitocides.

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