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Discovering allatostatin type-C receptor specific agonists

Kübra Kahveci, Mustafa Düzgün, Abdullah Emre Atış, Abdullah Yılmaz, Aida Shahraki, Başak Kandi Coşkun, Serdar Durdağı, Necla Birgül İyison

2024Nature Communications10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Currently, there is no pesticide available for the selective control of the pine processionary moth (Thaumetopoea pityocampa-specific), and conventional methods typically rely on mechanical techniques such as pheromone traps or broad-spectrum larvicidal chemicals. As climate change increases the range and dispersion capacity of crop and forest pests, outbreaks of the pine processionary occur with greater frequency and significantly impact forestry and public health. Our study is carried out to provide a T. pityocampa-specific pesticide targeting the Allatostatin Type-C Receptor (AlstR-C). We use a combination of computational biology methods, a cell-based screening assay, and in vivo toxicity and side effect assays to identify, for the first time, a series of AlstR-C ligands suitable for use as T. pityocampa-specific insecticides. We further demonstrate that the novel AlstR-C targeted agonists are specific to lepidopteran larvae, with no harmful effects on coleopteran larvae or adults. Overall, our study represents an important initial advance toward an insect GPCR-targeted next-generation pesticide design. Our approach may apply to other invertebrate GPCRs involved in vital metabolic pathways.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyG protein-coupled receptorInsectPesticideComputational biologyReceptorEcologyBiochemistryEntomological Studies and EcologyInsect and Pesticide ResearchForest Insect Ecology and Management
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