ryanodine and flubendiamide

ryanodine has been researched along with flubendiamide* in 6 studies

Reviews

2 review(s) available for ryanodine and flubendiamide

ArticleYear
New and selective ryanodine receptor activators for insect control.
    Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 2009, Jun-15, Volume: 17, Issue:12

    Diamide insecticides have emerged as one of the most promising new classes of insecticide chemistry owing to their excellent insecticidal efficacy and high margins of mammalian safety. Chlorantraniliprole and flubendiamide, the first two insecticides from this class, demonstrate exceptional activity across a broad range of pests in the order Lepidoptera. This chemistry has been confirmed to control insects via activation of ryanodine receptors which leads to uncontrolled calcium release in muscle. The high levels of mammalian safety are attributed to a strong selectivity for insect over mammalian receptors.

    Topics: Animals; Benzamides; Insect Control; Insecticides; Lepidoptera; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Ryanodine; Ryanodine Receptor Calcium Release Channel; Sulfones

2009
Insect ryanodine receptors: molecular targets for novel pest control chemicals.
    Invertebrate neuroscience : IN, 2008, Volume: 8, Issue:3

    Ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are a distinct class of ligand-gated calcium channels controlling the release of calcium from intracellular stores. They are located on the sarcoplasmic reticulum of muscle and the endoplasmic reticulum of neurons and many other cell types. Ryanodine, a plant alkaloid and an important ligand used to characterize and purify the receptor, has served as a natural botanical insecticide, but attempts to generate synthetic commercial analogues of ryanodine have proved unsuccessful. Recently two classes of synthetic chemicals have emerged resulting in commercial insecticides that target insect RyRs. The phthalic acid diamide class has yielded flubendiamide, the first synthetic ryanodine receptor insecticide to be commercialized. Shortly after the discovery of the phthalic diamides, the anthranilic diamides were discovered. This class has produced the insecticides Rynaxypyr and Cyazypyr. Here we review the structure and functions of insect RyRs and address the modes of action of phthalic acid diamides and anthranilic diamides on insect ryanodine receptors. Particularly intersting is the inherent selectivity both chemical classes exhibit for insect RyRs over their mammalian counterparts. The future prospects for RyRs as a commercially-validated target site for insect control chemicals are also considered.

    Topics: Animals; Benzamides; Calcium Signaling; Insect Proteins; Insecta; Insecticides; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Ryanodine; Ryanodine Receptor Calcium Release Channel; Sulfones

2008

Other Studies

4 other study(ies) available for ryanodine and flubendiamide

ArticleYear
Stable expression and functional characterisation of the diamondback moth ryanodine receptor G4946E variant conferring resistance to diamide insecticides.
    Scientific reports, 2015, Oct-01, Volume: 5

    Diamides, such as flubendiamide and chlorantraniliprole, belong to a new chemical class of insecticides that act as conformation-sensitive activators of insect ryanodine receptors (RyRs). Both compounds are registered for use against lepidopteran species such as the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella, a notorious global pest of cruciferous crops. Recently acquired resistance to diamide insecticides in this species is thought to be due to a target-site mutation conferring an amino acid substitution (G4946E), located within the trans-membrane domain of the RyR, though the exact role of this mutation has not yet been fully determined. To address this we have cloned a full-length cDNA encoding the P. xylostella RyR and established clonal Sf9 cell lines stably expressing either the wildtype RyR or the G4946E variant, in order to test the sensitivity to flubendiamide and chlorantraniliprole on the recombinant receptor. We report that the efficacy of both diamides was dramatically reduced in clonal Sf9 cells stably expressing the G4946E modified RyR, providing clear functional evidence that the G4946E RyR mutation impairs diamide insecticide binding.

    Topics: Animals; Benzamides; Caffeine; Calcium Signaling; Cloning, Molecular; Drug Tolerance; Gene Expression; Insect Proteins; Insecticides; Mutation, Missense; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; Ryanodine; Ryanodine Receptor Calcium Release Channel; Sf9 Cells; Spodoptera; Sulfones

2015
Insect ryanodine receptor: distinct but coupled insecticide binding sites for [N-C(3)H(3)]chlorantraniliprole, flubendiamide, and [(3)H]ryanodine.
    Chemical research in toxicology, 2012, Aug-20, Volume: 25, Issue:8

    Radiolabeled anthranilic diamide insecticide [N-C(3)H(3)]chlorantraniliprole was synthesized at high specific activity. It was compared with phthalic diamide insecticide flubendiamide and [(3)H]ryanodine in radioligand binding studies with house fly muscle membranes to provide the first direct evidence with a native insect ryanodine receptor that the major anthranilic and phthalic diamide insecticides bind at different allosterically coupled sites, i.e., there are three distinct Ca(2+)-release channel targets for insecticide action.

    Topics: Animals; Benzamides; Binding Sites; Calcium; Carbon; Insect Proteins; Insecta; Insecticides; Nitrogen; ortho-Aminobenzoates; Protein Binding; Ryanodine; Ryanodine Receptor Calcium Release Channel; Sulfones; Tritium

2012
Phthalic acid diamides activate ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ release channels in insects.
    Cell calcium, 2006, Volume: 39, Issue:1

    Flubendiamide represents a novel chemical family of substituted phthalic acid diamides with potent insecticidal activity. So far, the molecular target and the mechanism of action were not known. Here we present for the first time evidence that phthalic acid diamides activate ryanodine-sensitive intracellular calcium release channels (ryanodine receptors, RyR) in insects. With Ca(2+) measurements, we showed that flubendiamide and related compounds induced ryanodine-sensitive cytosolic calcium transients that were independent of the extracellular calcium concentration in isolated neurons from the pest insect Heliothis virescens as well as in transfected CHO cells expressing the ryanodine receptor from Drosophila melanogaster. Binding studies on microsomal membranes from Heliothis flight muscles revealed that flubendiamide and related compounds interacted with a site distinct from the ryanodine binding site and disrupted the calcium regulation of ryanodine binding by an allosteric mechanism. This novel insecticide mode of action seems to be restricted to specific RyR subtypes because the phthalic acid diamides reported here had almost no effect on mammalian type 1 ryanodine receptors.

    Topics: Animals; Benzamides; Caffeine; Calcium; Cell Line; CHO Cells; Cricetinae; Cytosol; Diamide; Drosophila melanogaster; Fura-2; Intracellular Membranes; Macrocyclic Compounds; Mice; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Moths; Muscles; Neurons; Oxazoles; Ryanodine; Ryanodine Receptor Calcium Release Channel; Sulfones; Transfection

2006
Flubendiamide, a novel Ca2+ channel modulator, reveals evidence for functional cooperation between Ca2+ pumps and Ca2+ release.
    Molecular pharmacology, 2006, Volume: 69, Issue:5

    Flubendiamide, developed by Nihon Nohyaku Co., Ltd. (Tokyo, Japan), is a novel activator of ryanodine-sensitive calcium release channels (ryanodine receptors; RyRs), and is known to stabilize insect RyRs in an open state in a species-specific manner and to desensitize the calcium dependence of channel activity. In this study, using flubendiamide as an experimental tool, we examined an impact of functional modulation of RyR on Ca2+ pump. Strikingly, flubendiamide induced a 4-fold stimulation of the Ca2+ pump activity (EC50=11 nM) of an insect that resequesters Ca2+ to intracellular stores, a greater increase than with the classical RyR modulators ryanodine and caffeine. This prominent stimulation, which implies tight functional coupling of Ca2+ release with Ca2+ pump, resulted in a marginal net increase in the extravesicular calcium concentration despite robust Ca2+ release from the intracellular stores by flubendiamide. Further analysis suggested that luminal Ca2+ is an important mediator for the functional coordination of RyRs and Ca2+ pumps. However, kinetic factors for Ca2+ pumps, including ATP and cytoplasmic Ca2+, failed to affect the Ca2+ pump stimulation by flubendiamide. We therefore conclude that the stimulation of Ca2+ pump by flubendiamide is mediated by the decrease in luminal calcium, which may induce calcium dissociation from the luminal Ca2+ binding site on the Ca2+ pump. This mechanism should play an essential role in precise control of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis.

    Topics: Animals; Benzamides; Calcium; Calcium Channels; Calcium Signaling; Cell Membrane; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Kinetics; Ryanodine; Spodoptera; Sulfones

2006