scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal Article

Ion channels as targets for insecticides

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The method with which the percentage of sodium channel population that needs to be modified to cause repetitive after-discharges can be measured accurately is developed and is applicable to other neuroactive drugs that act through the threshold phenomenon.
Abstract
Most insecticides are neurotoxicants causing various forms of hyperexcitation and paralysis in animals. A variety of neuroreceptors and ion channels have been identified as the major target sites of these neurotoxic insecticides. This paper gives the highlights of some of the recent development in this area. Pyrethroids keep the sodium channel open for unusually long times causing a prolonged flow of sodium current. The prolonged sodium current elevates and prolongs the depolarizing after-potential which reaches the threshold membrane potential to initiate repetitive after-discharges. We have developed the method with which the percentage of sodium channel population that needs to be modified to cause repetitive after-discharges can be measured accurately. In rat cerebellar Purkinje neurons, only 0.6% of sodium channels needs to be modified for hyperexcitation resulting in a large toxicity amplification. This concept is applicable to other neuroactive drugs that act through the threshold phenomenon. 'The mechanisms of selective toxicity of pyrethroids in mammals and insects have been quantitatively determined to be due mainly to the different sensitivity of the sodium channels to pyrethroids and the negative temperature dependence of pyrethroid action on the sodium channels. The degradation of pyrethroids play only a minor role. The negative temperature dependence of pyrethroid action is due to the increased sodium current flow at low temperature. The major site of action of dieldrin and hexachlorocyclohexane is the GABA A receptor chloride channel complex. Dieldrin exerts a dual action, initial stimulation and subsequent suppression, and the latter is responsible for hyperexcitation of animals. Dieldrin stimulation requires the γ2s subunit in the GABA receptor, whereas dieldrin suppression occurs in the presence or absence of the γ2s subunit.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Drug resistance in sea lice: a threat to salmonid aquaculture

TL;DR: Medicinal treatment of farmed fish has been the most predictable and efficacious, leading to extensive use of the available compounds, which has resulted in drug-resistant parasites occurring on farmed and possibly wild salmonids.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acaricide resistance in cattle ticks and approaches to its management: The state of play

TL;DR: The status of acaricide resistance in cattle ticks from different parts of the world is summarized and modes of action of currently used acaricides, mechanism of resistance development, contributory factors for the development and spread of resistance, management of resistant strains and strategies to prolong the effect of the available acar pesticides are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A reassessment of the neurotoxicity of pyrethroid insecticides.

TL;DR: The review provides an overview of recent studies that suggest additional effects of pyrethroids: developmental neurotoxicity, the production of neuronal death, and action mediated via pyrethroid metabolites, which carry important implications for human health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sodium Channel Inactivation: Molecular Determinants and Modulation

TL;DR: Systematic studies of these modulating factors and of the effects of point mutations in the channel molecule have yielded a fairly consistent picture of the molecular background of fast inactivation, which for the slow inactivation is still lacking.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neurobehavioral toxicology of pyrethroid insecticides in adult animals: a critical review.

TL;DR: A synthesis of the neurobehavioral evidence relating to the action of pyrethroids indicates that some differences in the experimental findings across compounds are also present in the low-effective dose range.
Related Papers (5)