首页|LABORATORY-DIRECTED EVOLUTION AS A TOOL FOR ANTICIPATING INSECTICIDE RESISTANCE
LABORATORY-DIRECTED EVOLUTION AS A TOOL FOR ANTICIPATING INSECTICIDE RESISTANCE
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The evolution of insecticide resistance provides a eukaryotic model system for studying enzyme evolution。 Understanding the molecular basis of insecticide resistance can assist both the development of new methods to combat resistance and the anticipation of future resistance。 Three insect species have independently evolved catalytic organophosphate (OP) insecticide resistance through a single active-site mutation (Gly>Asp) in the αE7 enzyme。 To explore the evolutionary potential of αE7, we subjected αE7 from the blowfly Lucilia cuprina to nine rounds of mutation and selection, resulting in a >1000-fold increase in OP-hydrolase activity and a k_(cat) / K_M > 10~6 M~(-1) min~(-1)。 Kinetic and structural analysis of the evolutionary trajectory revealed the molecular basis for the increase in catalytic efficiency。 Mutations occurring in the early stages of the trajectory enrich the productive side chain conformation of the key aspartic acid residue, while mutations in later stages remodel the binding pocket。 Remarkably, mutations appearing in the later rounds yielded larger improvements in catalytic efficiency compared to initial mutations, indicating that the initial Gly>Asp mutation represents only a fraction of the aE7 evolutionary potential。 Worryingly, this suggests that the Gly>Asp could be the first of many steps toward efficient OP-insecticide detoxification。