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Series GSE50069 Query DataSets for GSE50069
Status Public on Jan 01, 2014
Title Comparison of transcriptional profiling between insecticide-resistant (SP) and -susceptible (SMK) strains of Aedes aegypti
Organism Aedes aegypti
Experiment type Expression profiling by array
Summary Aedes aegypti SP strain vs. SMK strain.
Aedes aegypti is the major vector of yellow fever and dengue/dengue hemorrhagic fever. Starting with a population collected from Singapore, we established a pyrethroid-resistant A. aegypti strain (SP) and investigated three major possible mechanisms of insecticide resistance. After 10 generations of adult selection, an A. aegypti strain developed 1650-fold resistance to permethrin, which is one of the most widely used pyrethroid insecticides for mosquito control. SP larvae also developed 8790-fold resistance following selection of the adults. Prior to the selections, the frequencies of V1016G and F1534C mutations in domains II and III, respectively, of voltage-sensitive sodium channel genes (Vssc) were 0.44 and 0.56, respectively. In contrast, only G1016 alleles were present after two permethrin selections, indicating that G1016 can contribute more to the insensitivity of Vssc than C1534. In vivo metabolism studies showed that the SP strain excreted permethrin metabolites more rapidly than the susceptible SMK strain. Pretreatment with piperonyl butoxide caused strong inhibition of excretion of permethrin metabolites, suggesting that cytochrome P450 monooxygenases (P450s) play an important role in resistance development. In vitro metabolism studies also indicated an association of P450s with resistance. Microarray analysis showed that multiple P450 genes were over-expressed during the larval and adult stages in the SP strain. Following quantitative real time PCR, we focused on two P450 isoforms, CYP9M6 and CYP6BB2, and confirmed that they were capable of detoxifying permethrin to 4'-HO-permethrin. Over-expression of CYP9M6 was partially due to gene amplification. Association analysis demonstrated that CYP9M6 and CYP6BB2 complementarily conferred permethrin resistance. Two other P450s (CYP9J26 and CYP9J28), which are capable of metabolizing permethrin, were also over-expressed in the SP strain, indicating that at least four P450 isoforms are likely involved in resistance development. Our data show that it is unlikely that reduced cuticle penetration of permethrin contributes to resistance.
 
Overall design One-color experiment with two strains (SP, SMK) and 3 developmental stages/genders (larvae, adult males, and adult females), 4 biological replicates each.
 
Contributor(s) Kasai S, Komagata O, Itokawa K, Tomita T
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Submission date Aug 21, 2013
Last update date Jan 02, 2014
Contact name Shinji Kasai
Organization name National Institute of Infectious Diseases
Department Department of Medical Entomology
Lab Laboratory of Pesticide Science
Street address 1-23-1 Toyama
City Shinjukuku
State/province Tokyo
ZIP/Postal code 162-8640
Country Japan
 
Platforms (1)
GPL17604 Agilent-032208 Aedes aegypti AgyptiLPSVer1 (Feature Number version)
Samples (24)
GSM1213467 SMK Larvae, replicate 1
GSM1213468 SMK Larvae, replicate 2
GSM1213469 SMK Larvae, replicate 3
Relations
BioProject PRJNA215952

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE50069_RAW.tar 146.4 Mb (http)(custom) TAR (of TXT)
Processed data included within Sample table

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