posted on 2024-09-02, 17:05authored byHuihui Zhang, Zhen Zhang, Yixi Zhang, Xinyu Zhang, Zewen Liu
Nitenpyram, taking the place of imidacloprid, is a widely
used
neonicotinoid insecticide to control Nilaparvata lugens in Asia. Two P450s, CYP4CE1 and CYP6ER1, are key factors in the
metabolic resistance against nitenpyram and imidacloprid. In this
study, we found that CYP4CE1 expression was strongly
associated with nitenpyram resistance in 8 field-collected populations,
whereas CYP6ER1 expression correlated with imidacloprid
resistance. Hence, we focused on nitenpyram metabolism by CYP4CE1,
due to that imidacloprid metabolism by CYP6ER1 has intensively investigated.
Mass spectrometry analysis revealed that recombinant CYP4CE1 metabolized
nitenpyram into three products, N-desmethyl nitenpyram, hydroxy-nitenpyram,
and N-desmethyl hydroxy-nitenpyram, with a preference for hydroxylation.
In contrast, CYP6ER1 metabolized nitenpyram into a single product,
N-desmethyl nitenpyram. These results provide new insights into the
specific catalytic mechanisms of P450 enzymes in neonicotinoid metabolism
and underscore the importance of different catalytic reactions in
neonicotinoid insecticide resistance.