Title : An amino acid substitution attributable to insecticide-insensitivity of acetylcholinesterase in a Japanese encephalitis vector mosquito, Culex tritaeniorhynchus - Nabeshima_2004_Biochem.Biophys.Res.Commun_313_794 |
Author(s) : Nabeshima T , Mori A , Kozaki T , Iwata Y , Hidoh O , Harada S , Kasai S , Severson DW , Kono Y , Tomita T |
Ref : Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications , 313 :794 , 2004 |
Abstract :
A cDNA sequence encoding a Drosophila Ace-paralogous acetylcholinesterase (AChE) precursor of 701 amino acid residues was identified as the second AChE gene (Ace2) transcript from Culex tritaeniorhynchus. The Ace2 gene is tightly linked to organophosphorus insecticide (OP)-insensitivity of AChE on chromosome 2. The cDNA sequences were compared between an insecticide-susceptible strain and the resistant strain, TYM, that exhibits a 870-fold decrease in fenitroxon-sensitivity of AChE. Two amino acid substitutions were present in TYM mosquitoes. One is F455W whose homologous position in Torped AChE (Phe331) is located in the vicinity of the catalytic His in the acyl pocket of the active site gorge. The other substitution is located to a C-terminal Ile697 position that apparently seems to be excluded from the mature protein and is irrelevant to catalytic activity. The F455W replacement in the Ace2 gene is solely responsible for the insecticide-insensitivity of AChE in TYM mosquitoes. |
PubMedSearch : Nabeshima_2004_Biochem.Biophys.Res.Commun_313_794 |
PubMedID: 14697262 |
Gene_locus related to this paper: cultr-ACHE1 , cultr-ACHE2 |
Mutation | F455W_cultr-ACHE1 |
Gene_locus | cultr-ACHE1 cultr-ACHE2 |
Nabeshima T, Mori A, Kozaki T, Iwata Y, Hidoh O, Harada S, Kasai S, Severson DW, Kono Y, Tomita T (2004)
An amino acid substitution attributable to insecticide-insensitivity of acetylcholinesterase in a Japanese encephalitis vector mosquito, Culex tritaeniorhynchus
Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications
313 :794
Nabeshima T, Mori A, Kozaki T, Iwata Y, Hidoh O, Harada S, Kasai S, Severson DW, Kono Y, Tomita T (2004)
Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications
313 :794