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1.
The in vitro metabolism of EPN (O-ethyl O-p-nitrophenyl phenylphosphonothionate) and EPNO (O-ethyl O-p-nitrophenyl phenylphosphonate) in mouse liver was studied. EPNO was metabolized faster than EPN, and the highest metabolic activity was found in the 10,000g supernatant in the presence of both NADPH and glutathione. Liver microsomes in the presence of NADPH metabolize EPN to its oxygen analog, EPNO and p-nitrophenol. With the 100,000g supernatant only slight metabolism of EPN occurred in the presence of GSH. Metabolism of EPNO by liver microsomes increased upon the addition of NADPH. p-Nitrophenol was the only metabolite isolated in the presence of microsomes, whereas, with the addition of NADPH, both p-nitrophenol and desethyl EPNO were formed. Quantitative studies showed that there was little, if any, oxidative dearylation of EPNO by liver microsomes. The 100,000g supernatant was found to actively degrade EPNO, and this increased upon addition of glutathione. The initial rate of p-nitrophenol formation as a result of incubation of EPN and EPNO with liver microsomes was found to be higher with EPN than EPNO.  相似文献   

2.
The metabolism of fenitrothion was investigated in highly resistant (Akita-f) and susceptible (SRS) strains of the house fly, Musca domestica L. The Akita-f strain was 3500 times more resistant to fenitrothion than the SRS strain. Fenitrothion, topically applied to the flies, was metabolized in vivo far faster in the Akita-f strain than in the SRS strain. In vitro studies revealed that fenitrothion was metabolized by a cytochrome P-450-dependent monooxygenase system and glutathione S-transferases. The former oxidase system metabolized fenitrothion in vitro into fenitrooxon and 3-methyl-4-nitrophenol as major metabolites, and into 3-hydroxymethyl-fenitrothion and 3-hydroxymethyl-fenitrooxon as minor metabolites. Glutathione S-transferases metabolized fenitrothion into desmethylfenitrothion. The cytochrome P-450-dependent monooxygenase system and glutathione S-transferases of the resistant Akita-f strain had 1.4 to 2.2 times and 9.7 times, respectively, as great activities as those of the susceptible SRS strain. These results suggest the importance of glutathione S-transferases in fenitrothion resistance in the Akita-f strain.  相似文献   

3.
The optical isomers of EPN (O-ethyl O-p-nitrophenyl phenylphosphonothionate) and EPNO (O-ethyl O-p-nitrophenyl phenylphosphonate) have been synthesized. No significant difference in the rate of alkaline hydrolysis of the isomers at the two pH's evaluated was observed. The (+)-isomers of EPN and EPNO were more toxic to house flies than the corresponding (?)-isomers, while the (+)- and (?)-isomers, as well as the racemic mixture of EPN, were almost equally toxic to mice. The (+)-EPNO is more toxic to mice than the corresponding (?)-isomer. Cholinesterase inhibition studies demonstrated that (+)-EPNO has a higher bimolecular rate constant, (ki) than the corresponding (?)-isomer. This higher inhibitory power was due to a higher affinity (Ka) of the (+)-isomer.  相似文献   

4.
A strain of the fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda (J.E. Smith), collected from corn in Citra, Florida, showed high resistance to carbaryl (562-fold) and methyl parathion (354-fold). Biochemical studies revealed that various detoxification enzyme activities were higher in the field strain than in the susceptible strain. In larval midguts, activities of microsomal oxidases (epoxidases, hydroxylase, sulfoxidase, N-demethylase, and O-demethylase) and hydrolases (general esterase, carboxylesterase, β-glucosidase) were 1.2- to 1.9-fold higher in the field strain than in the susceptible strain. In larval fat bodies, various activities of microsomal oxidases (epoxidases, hydroxylase, N-demethylase, O-demethylases, and S-demethylase), glutathione S-transferases (CDNB, DCNB, and p-nitrophenyl acetate conjugation), hydrolases (general esterase, carboxylesterase, β-glucosidase, and carboxylamidase) and reductases (juglone reductase and cytochrome c reductase) were 1.3- to 7.7-fold higher in the field strain than in the susceptible strain. Cytochrome P450 level was 2.5-fold higher in the field strain than in the susceptible strain. In adult abdomens, their detoxification enzyme activities were generally lower than those in larval midguts or fat bodies; this is especially true when microsomal oxidases are considered. However, activities of microsomal oxidases (S-demethylase), hydrolases (general esterase and permethrin esterase) and reductases (juglone reductase and cytochrome c reductase) were 1.5- to 3.0-fold higher in the field strain than in the susceptible strain. Levels of cytochrome P450 and cytochrome b5 were 2.1 and 1.9-fold higher, respectively, in the field strain than in the susceptible strain. In addition, acetylcholinesterase from the field strain was 2- to 85-fold less sensitive than that from the susceptible strain to inhibition by carbamates (carbaryl, propoxur, carbofuran, bendiocarb, thiodicarb) and organophosphates (methyl paraoxon, paraoxon, dichlorvos), insensitivity being highest toward carbaryl. Kinetics studies showed that the apparent Km value for acetylcholinesterase from the field strain was 56% of that from the susceptible strain. The results indicated that the insecticide resistance observed in the field strain was due to multiple resistance mechanisms, including increased detoxification of these insecticides by microsomal oxidases, glutathione S-transferases, hydrolases and reductases, and target site insensitivity such as insensitive acetylcholinesterase. Resistance appeared to be correlated better with detoxification enzyme activities in larval fat bodies than in larval midguts, suggesting that the larval fat body is an ideal tissue source for comparing detoxification capability between insecticide-susceptible and -resistant insects.  相似文献   

5.
The herbicide, 2,4′-dinitro-4-trifluoromethyl diphenylether (fluorodifen), is eleaved in peanut to give the metabolite, S-(2-nitro-4-trifluoromethylphenyl)-glutathione. A comparison of the glutathione conjugate isolated from treated peanut leaves and from in vitro pea epicotyl glutathione S-transferase reaction showed that both metabolites were identical. Other polar metabolites were also isolated, but not identified. The structure of the glutathione conjugate was confirmed by amino acid analysis and by mass, NMR, and infrared spectroscopy. The p-nitrophenyl moiety is also conjugated to natural products and is released as the free p-nitrophenol upon acid hydrolysis.  相似文献   

6.
The induction of glutathione S-transferases and microsomal oxidases by host plants and allelochemicals was examined in sixth-instar larvae of insecticide-susceptible and resistant strains of the fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda (J. E. Smith). Among 11 host plants studied, parsnip and parsley were the best inducers of glutathione S-transferase, resulting in increases of 39- and 19-fold, respectively, compared with the artificial diet. The inducer in parsnip leaves was identified by mass spectrometry, high-pressure liquid chromatography, gas chromatography, and thin-layer chromatography as xanthotoxin, a furanocoumarin. Xanthotoxin also showed a bimodal effect on the microsomal oxidase systems, increasing cytochrome P-450 content and heptachlor epoxidase activity but inhibiting aldrin epoxidase, biphenyl 4-hydroxylase, and p-chloro-N-methylaniline N-demethylase. Using indole 3-acetonitrile, indole 3-carbinol, and flavone as inducers, the inducing pattern of glutathione S-transferases was the same toward 3,4-dichloronitrobenzene, 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, and methyl iodide. Microsomal oxidase and glutathione S-transferase were also inducible by host plants and allelochemicals in larvae of a carbaryl-resistant strain.  相似文献   

7.
Methyl bromide was metabolized by susceptible and resistant strains of adult granary weevil, Sitophilus granarius (L.), mainly by conjugation with glutathione. S-Methyl glutathione and S-methyl cysteine were produced by both strains and S-methyl glutathione sulfoxide was identified as a metabolite in the resistant strain. In the untreated insects, no significant difference was observed in glutathione S-transferase activity but the resistant contained approximately twice as much glutathione per insect as the susceptible strain. When the insects were treated with methyl bromide, the glutathione content of both strains was lowered; proportionally, however, the decrease was considerably higher in the susceptible than in the resistant strain. These results indicate that conjugation of methyl bromide with glutathione is a major detoxication pathway and tolerance to this fumigant is related, in part at least, to the level of glutathione in the granary weevil.  相似文献   

8.
The organophosphorus pesticides profenofos, sulprofos, O-ethyl O-(4-nitrophenyl) phenylphosphonothioate (EPN), and S,S,S,-tributyl phosphorotrithioate (DEF) administered intraperitoneally to mice at 0.5 to 5 mg/kg strongly inhibit the liver microsomal esterase(s) hydrolyzing trans-permethrin. Profenofos, EPN, and DEF at 25 mg/kg increase the intraperitoneal toxicity of fenvalerate > 25-fold and of malathion > 100-fold. Topically applied profenofos, sulprofos, and DEF significantly synergize the toxicity of cis-cypermethrin to cabbage looper larvae and house fly adults but these phosphorus compounds are much less effective in synergizing the toxicity of trans-permethrin. The magnitude of synergism appears to depend on the species, organophosphorus compound, and pyrethroid involved. Profenofos, sulprofos, and EPN do not significantly alter the persistence of trans-permethrin on bean foliage.  相似文献   

9.
The in vitro metabolism of [14C-methoxy] or [32P]azinphosmethyl by subcellular fractions of abdomens from a resistant and a susceptible strain of houseflies was studied. The degradative activity in both strains was associated with the microsomal and soluble fractions and required NADPH and glutathione, respectively. The resistant strain possessed higher activity for both the mixed-function oxidases and the glutathione transferase than the susceptible strain, and both systems appear to be important in the resistance mechanism. The mixed-function oxidases were involved in the oxidative desulfuration as well as the dearylation of azinphosmethyl. A glutathione transferase located in the soluble fraction catalyzed the formation of desmethyl azinphosmethyl and methyl glutathione. This enzyme also demethylated azinphosmethyl oxygen analog. Although the soluble fraction exhibited both glutathione S-alkyltransferase and S-aryltransferase activity against noninsecticidal substrates, no evidence of the transfer of the benzazimide moiety from azinphosmethyl to glutathione was obtained. Sephadex G-100 chromatography of the soluble enzymes revealed a common eluting fraction responsible for both types of transferase activity.  相似文献   

10.
The in vivo and in vitro metabolism of vamidothion [O,O-dimethyl S-[2-(1-methylcarbamoyl)-ethylthio] ethylphosphorothiolate] as well as the in vitro metabolism of thiovamidothion [O,O-dimethyl S-[2-(1-methylcarbamoyl)ethylthio] ethylphosphorodithioate] was investigated in insecticide-resistant and susceptible house fly strains. Vamidothion was converted in vivo to the sulfoxide, the principle metabolite, and subsequently to the sulfone at a slower rate. Vamidothion and vamidothion sulfoxide were hydrolyzed at the PS and SC bond. The resulting primary alcohol metabolite was further oxidized to a carboxylic acid followed by decarboxylation. No metabolism of vamidothion or thiovamidothion occurred in vitro without the addition of NADPH. The addition of NADPH resulted in rapid conversion of vamidothion to the sulfoxide, and thiovamidothion was oxidatively metabolized to six metabolic products. No qualitative differences were found between resistant and susceptible strains, but there were signficant quantitative differences. The metabolism was highest in the Rutgers strain followed by Cornell-R, Hirokawa, and then CSMA strain. The route of vamidothion and thiovamidothion metabolism was via the cytochrome P-450-dependent monooxygenase system, and none of the resistant strains showed glutathione S-transferase activity toward vamidothion or thiovamidothion. No further oxidation of vamidothion sulfoxide to the sulfone was observed and also no hydrolysis products were formed, in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
Cytochrome P-450, A- and B-esterase, amidase, and glutathione S-aryl transferase were assayed in the postmitochondrial centrifugal fraction, microsomes, and supernatant of rat liver, lungs, kidneys, and testes. Liver microsomes contained the highest P-450 levels and A-esterase activity. B-esterase activity was more generally distributed and higher in the microsomal tissue fractions. Microsomal amidase activity was highest in rat lung and lowest in the liver (per mg protein). Glutathione S-aryl transferase activity was highest in the liver. The in vitro metabolism of carbaryl, phosphamidon, and chlorotoluron by the various centrifugal fractions revealed many differences. Carbaryl metabolism was greater in the liver microsomal fractions than in any other preparation. 1-Naphthol was the major metabolite in all tissue fractions. Although very little metabolism of phosphamidon occurred in the rat, metabolism in the rat liver postmitochondrial fraction was slightly higher with respect to the production of metabolites than in the supernatant and microsomes combined. Chlorotoluron was not metabolized by any of the tissue fractions of the rat. At least a low level of activity toward some compounds was observed in all tissues, but this study confirmed that the liver was the most active metabolizing tissue as well as having the highest levels of enzymatic activity usually associated with pesticide metabolism.  相似文献   

12.
Various detoxifying enzymes, including microsomal oxidases, glutathione S-transferases, esterases, epoxide hydrolase, and DDT-dehydrochlorinase, were assayed in adult worker bees (Apis mellifera L.) using midguts as the enzyme source. A cell-free system was used for all enzyme assays, except that microsomal oxidases required intact midgut because of the inhibitor encountered. Midgut microsomal preparations contained mainly cytochrome P-420, the inactive form of cytochrome P-450, which may explain the low microsomal oxidase activity in microsomes. All enzymes studied were active, suggesting that the high susceptibility of honey bees to insecticides is not due to low detoxication capacity. Sublethal exposure of honey bees to various insecticides had no effect on these enzyme activities, with the exception of permethrin which significantly stimulated the glutathione S-transferase, and malathion, which significantly inhibited the α-naphthylacetate esterase and carboxylesterase.  相似文献   

13.
Decreased acetylcholinesterase (AChE) sensitivity and metabolic detoxification mediated by glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) were examined for their involvement in resistance to acephate in the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella. The resistant strain showed 47.5-fold higher acephate resistance than the susceptible strain had. However, the resistant strain was only 2.3-fold more resistant to prothiofos than the susceptible strain. The resistant strain included insects having the A298S and G324A mutations in AChE1, which are reportedly involved in prothiofos resistance in P. xylostella, showing reduced AChE sensitivity to inhibition by methamidophos, suggesting that decreased AChE1 sensitivity is one factor conferring acephate resistance. However, allele frequencies at both mutation sites in the resistant strain were low (only 26%). These results suggest that other factors such as GSTs are involved in acephate resistance. Expression of GST genes available in P. xylostella to date was examined using the resistant and susceptible strains, revealing no significant correlation between the expression and resistance levels.  相似文献   

14.
A Tetranychus cinnabarinus strain was collected from Chongqing, China. After 42 generations of selection with abamectin and 20 generations of selection with fenpropathrin in the laboratory, this T. cinnabarinus strain developed 8.7- and 28.7-fold resistance, respectively. Resistance to abamectin in AbR (abamectin resistant strain) and to fenpropathrin in FeR (fenpropathrin resistant strain) was partially suppressed by piperonyl butoxide (PBO), diethyl maleate (DEM) and triphenyl phosphate (TPP), inhibitors of mixed function oxidase (MFO), glutathione S-transferases (GST), and hydrolases, respectively, suggesting that these three enzyme families are important in conferring abamectin and fenpropathrin resistance in T. cinnabarinus. The major resistant mechanism to abamectin was the increasing activities of carboxylesterases (CarE), glutathione-S-transferase (GST) and mixed function oxidase (MFO), and the activity in resistant strain developed 2.7-, 3.4- and 1.4-fold contrasted to that in susceptible strain, respectively. The activity of glutathione-S-transferase (GST) in the FeR strain developed 2.8-fold when compared with the susceptible strain, which meant the resistance to fenpropathrin was related with the activity increase of glutathione-S-transferase (GST) in T. cinnabarinus. The result of the kinetic mensuration of carboxylesterases (CarE) showed that the structure of CarE in the AbR has been changed.  相似文献   

15.
Glutathione S-alkyl- and S-aryltransferase activities and the glutathione-dependent reactions involved in the metabolism of diazinon, parathion, DDT and γ-BHC were determined in two susceptible and three resistant housefly strains. The relative rate of formation of desethyl diazinon and desethyl parathion and the degradation of γ-BHC paralleled the activities of the alkyl and aryltransferases in the various strains of houseflies suggesting that a single enzyme might be involved. DDT-dehydrochlorinase showed different relative rates among the strains indicating that the dechlorination was catalyzed by a different enzyme. The enzyme responsible for the conjugation of the pyrimidinyl moiety of diazinon appears to be different from the one which catalyzes the conjugation of the p-nitrophenyl moiety of parathion. The dearylation reactions were not mediated by the glutathione S-aryltransferase in the various housefly strains.  相似文献   

16.
Glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) catalyzing the conjugation of reduced glutathione (GSH) to a vast range of xenobiotics including insecticides were investigated in the psocid Liposcelis bostrychophila Badonnel. GSTs from susceptible and two resistant strains (DDVP-R for dichlorvos-resistant strain and PH3-R for phosphine-resistant strain) of L. bostrychophila were purified by glutathione-agarose affinity chromatography and characterized by their Michaelis-Menten kinetics towards artificial substrates, i.e., 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB), in a photometric microplate assay. The specific activities of GSTs purified from two resistant strains were significantly higher than their susceptible counterpart. For the resistant strains, GSTs both showed a significantly higher affinity to the substrate GSH while a declined affinity to CDNB than those of susceptible strain. The inhibitory potential of ethacrynic acid was very effective with highest I50 value (the concentration required to inhibit 50% of GSTs activity) of 1.21 μM recorded in DDVP-R. Carbosulfan also exhibited excellent inhibitory effects on purified GSTs. The N-terminus of the purified enzyme was sequenced by Edman degradation, and the alignment of first 13 amino acids of the N-terminal sequence with other insect GSTs suggested the purified protein was similar to those of Sigma class GSTs.  相似文献   

17.
Fipronil toxicity and metabolism were studied in two insecticide‐resistant, and one susceptible western corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera, LeConte) populations. Toxicity was evaluated by exposure to surface residues and by topical application. Surface residue bioassays indicated no differences in fipronil susceptibility among the three populations. Topical bioassays were used to study the relative toxicity of fipronil, fipronil + the mono‐oxygenase inhibitor piperonyl butoxide, and fipronil's oxidative sulfone metabolite in two populations (one resistant with elevated mono‐oxygenase activity). Fipronil and fipronil‐sulfone exhibited similar toxicity and application of piperonyl butoxide prior to fipronil resulted in marginal effects on toxicity. Metabolism of [14C]fipronil was evaluated in vivo and in vitro in the three rootworm populations. In vivo studies indicated the dominant pathway in all populations to be formation of the oxidative sulfone metabolite. Much lower quantities of polar metabolites were also identified. In vitro studies were performed using sub‐cellular protein fractions (microsomal and cytosolic), and glutathione‐agarose purified glutathione‐S‐transferase. Oxidative sulfone formation occurred almost exclusively in in vitro microsomal reactions and was increased in the resistant populations. Highly polar metabolites were formed exclusively in in vitro cytosolic reactions. In vitro reactions performed with purified, cytosolic glutathione‐S‐transferase (MW = 27 kDa) did not result in sulfone formation, although three additional polar metabolites not initially detectable in crude cytosolic reactions were detected. Metabolism results indicate both cytochromes P450 and glutathione‐S‐transferases are important to fipronil metabolism in the western corn rootworm and that toxic sulfone formation by P450 does not affect net toxicity. © 2000 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

18.
The common pistachio psyllid, Agonoscena pistaciae, is the most damaging pest of pistachio in Iran, and is generally controlled by insecticides belonging to various classes especially, phosalone. The toxicity of phosalone in nine populations of the pest was assayed using the residual contact vial and insect-dip methods. The bioassay results showed significant discrepancy in susceptibility to phosalone among the populations. Resistance ratio of the populations to the susceptible population ranged from 3.3 to 11.3. The synergistic effects of TPP, PBO and DEM were evaluated on the susceptible and the most resistant population to determine the involvement of esterases, mixed function oxidases and glutathione S-transferases in resistance mechanisms, respectively. The level of resistance to phosalone in the resistant population was suppressed by TPP, PBO and DEM, suggesting that the resistance to phosalone is mainly caused by esterase detoxification. Biochemical enzyme assays revealed that esterase, glutathione S-transferase and cytochrome P450 monooxygenase activities in the resistant population was higher than that in the susceptible. Glutathione-S-transferases play a minor role in the resistance of the pest to phosalone.  相似文献   

19.
A field population of the rice stem borer (Chilo suppressalis Walker) with 203.3-fold resistance to triazophos was collected. After 8-generation of continuous selection with triazophos in laboratory, resistance increased to 787.2-fold, and at the same time, the resistance to isocarbophos and methamidophos was also enhanced by 1.9- and 1.4-fold, respectively, implying some cross-resistance between triazophos and these two organophosphate insecticides. Resistance to abamectin was slightly enhanced by triazophos selection, and fipronil and methomyl decreased. Synergism experiments in vivo with TPP, PBO, and DEM were performed to gain a potential indication of roles of detoxicating enzymes in triazophos resistance. The synergism results revealed that TPP (SR, 1.92) and PBO (SR 1.63) had significant synergistic effects on triazophos in resistant rice borers. While DEM (SR 0.83) showed no effects. Assays of enzyme activity in vitro demonstrated that the resistant strain had higher activity of esterase and microsomal O-demethylase than the susceptible strain (1.20- and 1.30-fold, respectively). For glutathione S-transferase activity, no difference was found between the resistant and the susceptible strain when DCNB was used as substrate. However, 1.28-fold higher activity was observed in the resistant strain when CDNB was used. These results showed that esterase and microsomal-O-demethylase play some roles in the resistance. Some iso-enzyme of glutathione S-transferase may involve in the resistance to other insecticides, for this resistant strain was selected from a field population with multiple resistance background. Acetylcholinesterase as the triazophos target was also compared. The results revealed significant differences between the resistant and susceptible strain. The Vmax and Km of the enzyme in resistant strain was only 32 and 65% that in the susceptible strain, respectively. Inhibition tests in vitro showed that I50 of triazophos on AChE of the resistant strain was 2.52-fold higher. Therefore, insensitive AChE may also involved in triazophos resistance mechanism of rice stem borer.  相似文献   

20.
The metabolism of etrimfos, O,O-dimethyl-O-(6-ethoxy-2-ethyl-4-pyrimidinyl) phosphorothioate was studied in vitro in a diazinon-resistant (Rutgers) and a susceptible (CSMA) strain of house flies. Practically no metabolism of etrimfos occurred without the addition of cofactors. However, the addition of the cofactor, reduced glutathione, resulted in a substantial amount of metabolism in both strains, the metabolism being higher in the resistant strain. The major route of metabolism was via the glutathione transferase system and the predominant metabolite was desmethyl etrimfos. Although the oxygen analog could not be isolated, microsomal oxidation of etrimfos resulted in the inhibition of acetylcholinesterase, suggesting the formation of the oxygen analog. Bovine serum albumin also degraded etrimfos yielding desmethyl etrimfos and 6-ethoxy-2-ethyl-4-hydroxypyrimidine.  相似文献   

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