Insect control Flashcards

1
Q

What are the methods of inhibition?

A
  • Physical removal (separation)
  • Chemical destruction- insecticides
  • Chemical deterrent
  • Biological controls
  • Genetic sterility
  • Ionising radiation
  • Gene transfer
  • Environment manipulation
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2
Q

Tell me about the physicla removal (separation) techniques?

A

Bed net (good with flies but not good with crawling insects)

Net over face and whole body against midge/ biting fly (Culicoides Impunctatus Goetghebuer)

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3
Q

What are the major classes of insecticides?

A

Organochlorides

Phenyl pyrazole

Organophosphates and carbamates

Pyrethroids

Neonicotinoids

Ryanoids

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4
Q

What are the two types of Organochlorides insecticide groups?

A

DDT

Chlorinatedalicyclics

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5
Q

How do DDT work?

A

Block (open, agonist) peripheral NS Na+ channels

Preventing closure resulting in hyperexcitability of the nerve and later paralysis

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6
Q

Tell me a bit about DDT history

A

First synthesised in 1874 by Zeidler

Insecticide action discovered by Müller in 1939

Used in WWII to control malaria and typhyus among soldiers and in camps

Using in general agriculture

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7
Q

Where is DDT banned, how is it now used?

A

Banned in: Hungary, Norway, Sweden, Germany and UK

Today 3,314 tonnes produced for malaria and Leishmaniasis control via indoor residual spraying and for soaking bed and bed nets.

No longer used for outdoor environment (India)

Resistance is controlled

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8
Q

What is the DDT side effects to humans?

A
  • Low level human carcinogen
  • Endocrine disrupting
  • Disruption in semen quality, menstruation, gestational length, and duration of lactation
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9
Q

What is DDT side effects to environment (silent spring)?

A

Persistent and toxic to insects and other invertebrates (crayfish, daphnids, sea shrimp)- hence destroys food webs (esp fish)

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10
Q

Because DDT concentration in the upper food chain is not broken down readily, why further effects can it cause?

A

Concentration in upper food chain as not broken down readily- e

ggshell thinning and population decline bird of prey inhibition of calcium ATPase in the shell gland (needed to calcify shells)

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11
Q

What are some examples of Chlorinatedcyclics?

A

Aldrin

Dieldrin

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12
Q

How do Chlorinatedalicyclics work?

A

block (closed) the GABA chloride complex, which inhibits chloride flow into the nerve, inhibit an inhibitor channel

Block the GABA chloride complex, which inhibits chloride flow into the nerve- blocking inhibitory CNS pathways

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13
Q

Tell me about the Aldrin and Dieldrin forms

A

Aldrin the inactive form is metabolised to Dieldrin- both high persistence

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14
Q

What are the side effects to the chlorinatedalicyclics?

A

NS damage- convulsions- long term exposure link to PD

An endocrine disruptor with immune effects- breast cancer, reproductive changes, acting an oestrogen, antiandrogen

A teratogen

Environmental

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15
Q

How does Phenyl pyrazole work?

A

Blocks (closed)- glutamate-activated chloride channels in insects (absent in mammals)

Also block the GABA chloride complex in insect CNS

Limits chloride flow into the nerve, blocking inhibitory CNS pathways lead to hyperexcitability

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16
Q

What are the environmental effects of phenyl pyrazole?

A

Environmental effects- also used a widespread insecticide (this is because they have a limited half-life)

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17
Q

What are some examples of organophosphates and carbamates?

A

Dichlorvos and Malathion

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18
Q

How do organophosphates and carbamates work?

A

block acetylcholinesterase (as do carbamates e.g., aldicarb)

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19
Q

How do organophosphates act as pesticides?

A

Organophosphate pesticides (related to nerve toxins-sarin)- irreversibly inactivate acetylcholinesterase- however there is varying affinity for vertebrate form

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20
Q

Why are organophosphates a better alternative to Organochlorides?

A

OPS hydrolyse rapidly (so tend to break down) so a better alternative to Organochlorides, but they have greater acute toxicity. Even at low levels, Ops may be hazardous to the brain development

Therefore;

OP= kill quick

OC= Long term effect

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21
Q

How are organophosphates used?

A

Residential use of organophosphates banned, still sprayed agriculturally on fruit and vegetables

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22
Q

Examples of organophosphates and Carbamates

A
23
Q

How does Acetylcholinesterase work in the cholinergic system?

A

Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) is a cholinergic enzyme primarily found at postsynaptic neuromuscular junctions, especially in muscles and nerves. It immediately breaks down or hydrolyzes acetylcholine (ACh), a naturally occurring neurotransmitter, into acetic acid and choline

24
Q

What long term effects does organophosphates/ carbamates cause that cannot be explained?

A

Neuropsychological performance significantly poorer

EEG tests poorer in exposed group

25
Q

Pyrethroids are the artificial version, what are they based on?

A

Based on pyrethrin’s (natural) produced by Chrysanthemum cineraria folium

26
Q

How is Pyrethroids used?

A

Main household insecticide

Pyrethrum has been used for centuries as an insecticide (lice treatment)

Relatively harmless to vertebrates and short lived

27
Q

How do Pyrethroids work?

A

Block (open) axonal voltage-gated sodium channels so prevent repolarising and paralyse the organism

28
Q

Tell me about second generation pyrethroids

A

Second generation more long lived but has greater off target effects and mammalian toxicity (dermatitis- CNS effects)

29
Q

Examples of pyrethroids

A
30
Q

What action do Neonicotinoids have?

A

Nicotine like action

31
Q

Give an example of a neonicotinoid

A

Imidacloprid was the most widely used insecticide in the world

32
Q

How do Neonicotinoids work?

A

Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor agonist in insect CNS

33
Q

How do Neonicotinoids compare to organophosphates and carbamate insecticides?

A

Compared to organophosphate and carbamate insecticide neonicotinoids cause less vertebrate toxicity as differences in nicotinic receptor (Acetylcholinesterase’s more conserved)

34
Q

What do low and high levels of neonicotinoids result in?

A

Low levels cause nervous stimulation

high levels block the receptor causing paralysis

35
Q

Tell me some more facts about neonicotinoids

A

relatively long lived

Imidacloprid is effective against sucking insects (fleas), chewing insects on domestic animals

Role in off target bee losses- very low levels related to CNS effects reducing bees’ ability to forage, learn and remember navigation routes to and from food sources

36
Q

What are ryanoids?

A

Alkaloid from south American willow

37
Q

How do Ryanoids work?

A

Binds to ryanodine receptor, calcium channels in muscle (all 3 forms of muscle)

Agonist for the receptor causing released of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, leading to massive muscular contractions

38
Q

What effect does ryanoids have in humans?

A

Has similar toxic effects on mammals- not well absorbed

39
Q

Whats the artifical version of ryanoids?

A

Chlorantraniliprole- artificial versions show far greater insect specificity

40
Q

Are ryanoids long or short acting?

A

Short acting

41
Q

Name an inhibitor used for chemical inhibition

A

N, N-Diethyl-meta-toluamide

(DEET)

42
Q

What is DEET used for?

A

Insect repellants, against mosquitos, ticks, fleas and other biting insects

43
Q

What are two potential actions of how DEET works?

A
  1. Blocking insect olfactory receptors for 1-octen-3-ol, a volatile substance in human sweat and breath
  2. Binds to own receptor (IR40a) and in olfactory receptor in the antennae, explains inhibition in the absence of 1-octan-3-ol, (eucalyptol, linalool, and thujone act this way too)
44
Q

Whats a genetic methods used?

A

Sterile insect technique

45
Q

Tell me about the sterile insect technique

Provide examples of parasites it can be used against

A

Many biting insects mate only once- hence if overwhelming numbers of sterile males are released, these mate, and hence reduce the actively reproducing female population

Males usually sterilised with radiation

Repeated release of sterile males can diminish populations

  • Screw-worm fly (feeds on cattle) in north America
  • Tsetse fly in Africa (primary host for Trypanosoma- sleeping sickness and nagana) in Zanzibar

no residues

no (direct) effects on non-target species

46
Q

What are some limitations to the sterile insect technique?

A

often needs chemical treatment to suppress population before the use of sterile insects

sex separation can be difficult, for screwworm- females also released (not a problem here but would be for species where female bite repeatedly and transmits disease e.g., mosquitoes)

radiation dose be correct- too high can reduce male mating fitness, insufficient fertile males released

the technique is species specific (22 Tsetse fly species)

the cost of producing sufficient sterile insects (20,000,000+) can be high

47
Q

Whats an example of a gene transfer system?

A

The Tet suicide system

48
Q

Tell me about the Tet suicide system

A

in presence of tetracycline- it binds to tetO7 and stopes expression of TAV gene

in absence of tetracycline- tetO7/hsp70 (heat shock protein 70) acts as a functioning promotor making tTAV (tetracycline-repressible transcriptional activator) which binds to the tetO7 promotor driving its own expression in an uncontrolled feedback loop

Hence with tetracycline you make you insects, then release them to mate in general population, now no tetracycline- takes roughly 5-10 days for the loop to dominate all transcription (so late acting lethality)- then these insects’ mate and lay eggs- they then die as do their grub offspring

“Non” sterile lethal male self-limiting system

Outcompetes any other proteins being produced

A positive feedback lethal system

49
Q

Tell me about Gene drives

A

In normal sexual reproduction, each of the two versions of a given gene has a 50% change of being inherited by a particular offspring

Gene drives are genetic system that circumvent Mendelian rules:

They greatly increase the offs that the driven gene will be passed on to offspring, even if they reduce the change that each individual organism will then reproduce

Occur naturally but can now be engineered

Clustered regularly interspaces short palindromic repeat- CRISPR- Cas9 system

You can produce a plasmid with the guide RNA and the CRISPR gene on one plasmid

Donor RNA can be integrated which will remove guide region of DNA so MRNA can no longer bind

Can put longer sequences in to drive homologous recombination efficiently

If donor not inserted then it will keep being cut until something disrupts it

Can produce plasmif which contains sequence of guide RNA and CRISPR gene

50
Q

Explain the gene drive system

A
51
Q

Gene drive system

A
52
Q

How can we use the gene drive system?

A
53
Q

The gene drive previously explained is the ‘standard drive’, tell me about the other form, the ‘Daisy-chain drive’

A

Separate component

Make insects

Breed together

Make gRNA that will cut allele

CRISPS duplicates

Becomes homozygous which contains guide that will cut another allele further down with is also able to be homozygous