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Evaluation of flubendiamide‐induced mitochondrial dysfunction and metabolic changes in Helicoverpa armigera (Hubner)
Authors:Bharat Nareshkumar  Shaik Mohammad Akbar  Hari Chand Sharma  Senigala K. Jayalakshmi  Kuruba Sreeramulu
Affiliation:1. Department of Biochemistry, Gulbarga University, Gulbarga, Karnataka, India;2. Entomology, International Crops Research Institute for the Semi‐Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), Patancheru, Telangana State, India;3. Department of Plant Pathology, Agriculture Research Station (University of Agricultural Sciences‐Raichur), Gulbarga, Karnataka, India
Abstract:Phthalic acid diamide insecticides are the most effective insecticides used against most of the lepidopteran pests including Helicoverpa armigera, a polyphagous pest posing threat to several crops worldwide. The present studies were undertaken to understand different target sites and their interaction with insect ryanodine receptors (RyR). Bioassays indicated that flubendiamide inhibited the larval growth in dose‐dependent manner with LD50 value of 0.72 μM, and at 0.8 μM larval growth decreased by about 88%. Flubendiamide accelerated the Ca2+‐ATPase activity in dose‐dependent trend, and at 0.8 μM, the activity was increased by 77.47%. Flubendiamide impedes mitochondrial function by interfering with complex I and F0F1‐ATPase activity, and at 0.8 μM the inhibition was found to be about 92% and 50%, respectively. In vitro incubation of larval mitochondria with flubendiamide induced the efflux of cytochrome c, indicating the mitochondrial toxicity of the insecticide. Flubendiamide inhibited lactate dehydrogenase and the accumulation of H2O2, thereby preventing the cells from lipid peroxidation compared to control larvae. At 0.8 μM the LDH, H2O2 content and lipid peroxidation was inhibited by 98.44, 70.81, and 70.81%, respectively. Cytochrome P450, general esterases, AChE, and antioxidant enzymes (catalase and superoxide dismutase) exhibited a dose‐dependent increasing trend, whereas alkaline phosphatase and the midgut proteases, except amino peptidase, exhibited dose‐dependent inhibition in insecticide‐fed larvae. The results suggest that flubendiamide induced the harmful effects on the growth and development of H. armigera larvae by inducing mitochondrial dysfunction and inhibition of midgut proteases, along with its interaction with RyR.
Keywords:cytochrome c  flubendiamide  Helicoverpa armigera  mitochondrial dysfunction  proteinases
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