Insecticide Targets: Learning to Keep Up with Resistance and Changing Concepts of Safety

  • Casida, John E. (Environmental Chemistry and Toxicology Laboratory, Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California) ;
  • Quistad, Gary B. (Environmental Chemistry and Toxicology Laboratory, Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California)
  • Received : 2000.10.25
  • Published : 2000.12.31

Abstract

Pest insect control is dependent on about 200 insecticides that work by relatively few mechanisms. The targets they disrupt are mostly involved in the nervous system, respiratory chain, growth and development, or the gut. The major nerve targets are: acetylcholinesterase for the organophosphates and methylcarbamates; the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor for the neonicotinoids; the $\gamma$-aminobutyric acid receptor for several chlorinated hydrocarbons and fipronil; the voltage-gated sodium channel for DDT and pyrethroids. Selection of resistant strains often confers cross-resistance to some or all other insecticides working at the same site. The toxicological properties of different compounds acting on the same target are increasingly considered together, summating the risk even though the compounds are of quite diverse chemical types. Continuing attention is also being given to secondary targets not involved in the primary mechanism of toxicity but instead in side effects that must be considered in the overall safety evaluation. Research on insecticide targets is important in learning to keep up with resistance and changing concepts and policies on safety. These relationships are illustrated by recent studies in the Environmental Chemistry and Toxicology Laboratory of the University of California at Berkeley.

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