按蚊
生物
药理学
疟疾
斯氏按蚊
药代动力学
冈比亚按蚊
医学
免疫学
生态学
幼虫
埃及伊蚊
作者
Lee R. Haines,Anna Trett,Clair Rose,Natalia García,Marcos Sterkel,Dagmara McGuinness,Clément Regnault,Michael P. Barrett,Didier Leroy,Jeremy N. Burrows,Giancarlo A. Biagini,L. Ranganath,Ghaith Aljayyoussi,Álvaro Acosta-Serrano
标识
DOI:10.1126/scitranslmed.adr4827
摘要
One approach to interrupting the transmission of insect-borne diseases that is successfully used in veterinary medicine is exploiting the ability of antiparasitic drugs to make vertebrate blood toxic for blood-feeding insects. Recent studies have identified 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD), an enzyme of the tyrosine detoxification pathway, as essential for hematophagous arthropods to digest their blood meals. Such blood-feeding insects include anopheline mosquitoes, which transmit malaria-causing Plasmodium parasites. A US Food and Drug Administration–approved HPPD enzyme inhibitor called nitisinone is a drug used to treat rare human-inherited disorders of the tyrosine pathway. Here, we demonstrate that feeding human blood containing nitisinone to insectary-reared female Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes was mosquitocidal to both young and old mosquitoes as well as insecticide-resistant Anopheles strains. Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) modeling of nitisinone’s dose-response relationship (when administered at the highest recommended doses for adults and children) demonstrated improved efficacy against mosquitoes compared with the gold standard endectocidal drug, ivermectin. Furthermore, blood samples from individuals with alkaptonuria (a rare genetic metabolic disorder in the tyrosine degradation pathway), who were taking a daily low dose of 2 milligrams of nitisinone, were shown to be lethal to mosquitoes. Thus, inhibiting the Anopheles HPPD enzyme with nitisinone warrants further investigation as a complementary intervention for vector control and the prevention of malaria transmission.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI