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Insecticide resistance profile of Anopheles gambiae from a phase II field station in Cové, southern Benin: implications for the evaluation of novel vector control products

Abstract

Background

Novel indoor residual spraying (IRS) and long-lasting insecticidal net (LLIN) products aimed at improving the control of pyrethroid-resistant malaria vectors have to be evaluated in Phase II semi-field experimental studies against highly pyrethroid-resistant mosquitoes. To better understand their performance it is necessary to fully characterize the species composition, resistance status and resistance mechanisms of the vector populations in the experimental hut sites.

Methods

Bioassays were performed to assess phenotypic insecticide resistance in the malaria vector population at a newly constructed experimental hut site in Cové, a rice growing area in southern Benin, being used for WHOPES Phase II evaluation of newly developed LLIN and IRS products. The efficacy of standard WHOPES-approved pyrethroid LLIN and IRS products was also assessed in the experimental huts. Diagnostic genotyping techniques and microarray studies were performed to investigate the genetic basis of pyrethroid resistance in the Cové Anopheles gambiae population.

Results

The vector population at the Cové experimental hut site consisted of a mixture of Anopheles coluzzii and An. gambiae s.s. with the latter occurring at lower frequencies (23 %) and only in samples collected in the dry season. There was a high prevalence of resistance to pyrethroids and DDT (>90 % bioassay survival) with pyrethroid resistance intensity reaching 200-fold compared to the laboratory susceptible An. gambiae Kisumu strain. Standard WHOPES-approved pyrethroid IRS and LLIN products were ineffective in the experimental huts against this vector population (8–29 % mortality). The L1014F allele frequency was 89 %. CYP6P3, a cytochrome P450 validated as an efficient metabolizer of pyrethroids, was over-expressed.

Conclusion

Characterizing pyrethroid resistance at Phase II field sites is crucial to the accurate interpretation of the performance of novel vector control products. The strong levels of pyrethroid resistance at the Cové experimental hut station make it a suitable site for Phase II experimental hut evaluations of novel vector control products, which aim for improved efficacy against pyrethroid-resistant malaria vectors to WHOPES standards. The resistance genes identified can be used as markers for further studies investigating the resistance management potential of novel mixture LLIN and IRS products tested at the site.

Background

Malaria vector control and prevention today largely depends on the use of insecticides applied as indoor residual spray (IRS) or long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs). Both interventions are effective [1, 2] and have contributed immensely to reducing the burden of malaria in recent years [3]. Nevertheless, the rapid development and spread of insecticide resistance to the limited classes of insecticides approved for vector control poses a major threat to the gains so far achieved in malaria control [4]. The need for new insecticide products that can circumvent existing mechanisms of resistance to current insecticides has become critical.

There is currently concerted effort from the international vector control community towards the development of new public health insecticides. The present portfolio of the Innovative Vector Control Consortium (IVCC) for example, is designed to produce three entirely new classes of insecticides by 2023 with no cross-resistance to existing classes of insecticides [5]. The IVCC has set up several projects and some novel IRS and LLIN products have been taken to evaluation phase. The World Health Organization (WHO) through its pesticide evaluation scheme (WHOPES) has set criteria that such products must meet to obtain recommendation for large-scale use against malaria vectors. WHOPES guidelines require that these products be evaluated in Phase I laboratory, Phase II semi-field experimental hut studies and in Phase III randomized controlled trials in households or village clusters [6, 7].

Experimental huts are a good simulation of human-occupied houses which allow the performance of indoor vector control interventions/products to be measured in terms of their ability to kill mosquitoes, prevent feeding and deter mosquitoes from entering a home. Several experimental hut stations have been constructed across sub-Saharan Africa and used for evaluating various indoor vector control products/tools following WHOPES guidelines [813]. However, the resistance profile of the local vector populations in some of these studies was not fully characterized at the time of evaluation, making interpretation of results complex [14]. Considering the movement towards the evaluation of a new generation of vector control products that are expected to show improved efficacy against insecticide-resistant mosquitoes in order to attain WHO recommendation for large-scale use in pyrethroid resistant areas, it becomes imperative that the vector populations at experimental hut stations used for such evaluations are highly resistant and the profile of resistance and vector species is fully characterized and understood at the time of evaluation. In addition, because insecticide resistance tends to vary from one locality to another usually over very short distances, the local vector resistance profile reported for such Phase II evaluations has to be specific for the vicinity of the experimental hut station where the study was conducted. Furthermore, the new guidelines for substantiating efficacy claims of novel LLINs in areas of high resistance recently published by the Vector Control Advisory Group (VCAG) [15] specifies criteria that the vector populations in hut sites used for Phase II evaluations of such novel products should meet; the vector population should be well characterized and should have a pyrethroid resistance ratio of at least ten-fold compared to a susceptible laboratory strain.

The current study was designed to fully characterize insecticide resistance in the Anopheles gambiae sl vector population from an experimental hut station in Cové, Benin, a newly constructed site belonging to the Pan African Malaria Vector Research Consortium (PAMVERC) collaborative site between the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) and Centre de Recherches Entomologique de Cotonou (CREC) in parallel with a series of Phase II evaluations of novel IRS and LLIN products to WHOPES standards. Studies were also performed to assess year-round hut-entry rates in the Cové site. The efficacy of current WHOPES-approved pyrethroid IRS and LLINs was assessed in the experimental huts. The implications of the findings for the evaluation of the novel vector control tools aimed at improving the control of insecticide-resistant vector populations is discussed.

Methods

Cové site and experimental huts

The Cové Phase II experimental hut station is situated at the centre of a huge rice field in the city of Cové (7o14′N2o18′E) located 159 km from Cotonou, the economic capital of Benin (Fig. 1). The rice paddies provide extensive breeding sites for An. gambiae s.l. throughout the year. The rainy season extends from March to September and the dry season from October to February. Irrigated rice farming is done twice every year at the hut station, the first from March to May and the second from October to January. Seventeen experimental huts of the typical West African design described in WHOPES guidelines [6] have been constructed at this site by the PAMVERC collaborative unit between LSHTM and CREC.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Map of Cové, Benin

To assess year-round variation in mosquito density and hut-entry rates in the experimental huts at Cové, consenting human volunteers slept under an untreated net in the huts and mosquitoes were collected daily over 12 months and brought to the laboratory for identification.

WHO susceptibility bioassays

WHO susceptibility tests to assess the prevalence of resistance were performed using papers obtained from Universiti Sains Malaysia, impregnated with a range of insecticides from the four approved classes for vector control: namely, 0.75 % permethrin, 4 % DDT, 0.05 % deltamethrin, 0.1 % bendiocarb, 5 % malathion, and 4 % fenithrothion. Adult female mosquitoes 2–3 days old, which emerged from larvae collected from breeding sites next to the experimental huts, were exposed for 1 h to the insecticide-treated papers and mortality was recorded 24 h later. Approximately 100 mosquitoes (four replicates of 25 mosquitoes) were used per test and the average mortality was calculated. Control mosquitoes were exposed to untreated papers. Resistant females which remained alive after 24 h were kept for one more day until they were 3–4 days old, after which they were preserved submerged in RNA later for genotyping, target site resistance and microarray studies.

Resistance intensity dose–response bioassay

To determine the intensity of resistance to pyrethroids in the wild An. gambiae Cové strain, mosquitoes that emerged from larvae collected from breeding sites at the experimental hut station were tested in CDC bottle bioassays treated with a range of doses of alphacypermethrin from 0.05 to 5 µg. Comparison was made with the laboratory-susceptible An. gambiae Kisumu strain tested with a dose range of 0.0005–0.05 µg. Alphacypermethrin was chosen for this study because it was one of the main pyrethroid insecticides used as a positive control in the parallel hut evaluations. A total of 100 mosquitoes were exposed for 1 h at each concentration and deaths were scored 24 h later. Log-dosage mortality curves were generated using probit analysis and estimates of the dose required to kill 50 % (LD50) of each strain and the resistance ratios relative to the susceptible laboratory strain were generated (PoloPlus version 1.0).

Synergist bioassays

The effect of the insecticide synergist piperonyl butoxide (PBO), the primary action of which is to inhibit P450 mono-oxygenase enzymes, was evaluated in CDC bottle bioassays. One-hundred and fifty-two to five day old adult females were exposed (in batches of 25 mosquitoes) for 30 min in bottles treated with permethrin (21.5 µg/bottle) either alone or after 1 h pre-exposure to PBO (400 µg/bottle). Mosquitoes were also exposed to PBO alone. Control bottles were treated with acetone alone. The laboratory-susceptible Kisumu strain was also tested in bottles treated with permethrin alone for comparison. Mortality was recorded after 24 h.

Efficacy of standard pyrethroid LLIN and IRS in experimental huts in Cové, Benin

To demonstrate the impact of pyrethroid resistance in Cové on the performance of standard WHOPES-approved pyrethroid LLINs and IRS products, hut data with pyrethroid treatments from four experimental hut trials that were performed in the Cové experimental huts station in parallel to this study were combined. These trials evaluated different novel IRS and LLIN products in comparison with the currently approved pyrethroid products following WHOPES guidelines. The results from the individual evaluation studies are being reported separately but for the current study, the mortality rates for mosquitoes entering huts treated with the WHOPES-approved pyrethroid LLINs and IRS were analysed and comparison made with an untreated control net. The following five treatments were included:

  1. 1.

    Untreated control net

  2. 2.

    Olyset Net (permethrin-incorporated LLIN)

  3. 3.

    Interceptor 1 (alphacypermethrin-coated LLIN)

  4. 4.

    Deltamethrin IRS applied at 25 mg/sq m

  5. 5.

    Alphacypermethrin IRS applied at 25 mg/sq m

During the trials, consenting human volunteers slept in the huts from dusk to dawn to attract mosquitoes. Mosquitoes were collected in the morning and brought to the laboratory for identification and scoring of mortality, blood feeding rate and exophily. The nets were rotated between huts to account for hut attractiveness to mosquitoes while the sleepers were rotated on successive nights to reduce any bias due to individual attractiveness to mosquitoes in accordance with a Latin square design.

Ethical considerations

Chemoprophylaxis was provided to volunteer sleepers prior to the hut studies. Approval was obtained from the ethics review boards of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the Ministry of Health in Benin.

Species identification and target site resistance

To identify vector species and target site resistance in Cové, DNA was extracted from a pair of legs taken from each female mosquito tested in the WHO susceptibility bioassays, and also from a set of unexposed mosquitoes (N = 89) collected from the Cové hut site at the beginning of the previous dry season (September–October 2014) for comparison between seasons. The legs were transferred to 96-well plates and extraction was done using a buffer-based boiling method. Species identification was conducted on each DNA sample using standard PCR techniques [16, 17]. TaqMan assays were used to characterize each sample for genotypes at three loci in the voltage-gated, sodium channel, target site (L1014F, L1015S and N1575Y) [18, 19] which confer resistance to DDT and pyrethroids, and also for the ace-1 G119S resistance mutation in acetylcholinesterase, the target site of organophosphates and carbamates [20].

Microarrays

Total RNA was extracted from batches of ten mosquitoes that survived exposure to either deltamethrin or permethrin using the Ambion RNA extraction Kit. RNA quality and quantity was assessed using a NanoDrop spectrophotometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and a 2100 Bioanalyzer (Agilent Technologies) before further use. Three biological replicate extractions of total RNA from batches of ten mosquitoes for each treatment population were labelled and hybridized to the An. gambiae 15 k whole genome microarray using previously described protocols [21]. Expression profiles of females from pyrethroid-susceptible NGuosso and Kisumu strains, unexposed to insecticides, were compared to those of the permethrin and deltamethrin-selected Cové females using an interwoven loop design (Fig. 2). The design is optimized for two microarray slides (16 arrays) to maximize direct connections of primary interest (resistant vs susceptible).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Interwoven loop design with three pools each of deltamethrin- (Delta) and permethrin-selected (Perm) samples from Cové, Benin, and one pool each from fully pyrethroid-susceptible colony samples (NGuosso and Kisumu). The outer loop connections run clockwise, directionality of inner connections is indicated by arrows: 1:2 indicates the dye label applied to the pool at the start and end of the connection, respectively. The R program MAANOVA [34] was used to analyse the interwoven loop data using previously described custom R-scripts [21]. No outlying quality microarrays were detected. Analysis used a threshold for gene discovery, which relied on consistency of a liberal P value threshold (P < 0.05), coupled with consistency in over-expression and a fold-change threshold of >2 across all deltamethrin and permethrin pools vs both susceptible pools

Results

Monthly hut-entry rates

The average numbers of mosquitoes entering the experimental huts in Cové from December 2013 to November 2014 are presented in Fig. 3. The entry rates did not coincide with the rainy seasons; average numbers entering were highest during the drier months of the year (November to February) when rainfall is lowest in Cové. Peaks in monthly hut-entry rates occurred 2 months into the first and second rice planting (49/hut/night in April and 144/hut/night in December, respectively) thus showing synchrony with rice planting seasons in Cové. The lowest entry rate was recorded between July and September (3.5–6.5/hut/night).

Fig. 3
figure 3

Monthly average night catch of Anopheles gambiae in untreated experimental huts in Cové, Benin

WHO susceptibility bioassays

The mortality rates of the wild Cové strain exposed to diagnostic doses of insecticides in WHO susceptibility bioassays are presented in Fig. 4. Mortality in the control was 4 %. Mortality with the organochlorine DDT and with pyrethroids was less than 15 % indicating a high prevalence of resistance to both classes of insecticide. Bendiocarb, malathion and fenitrothion induced 100 % mortality demonstrating full susceptibility to organophosphates and carbamates.

Fig. 4
figure 4

Mortality (%) of wild Anopheles gambiae sl from the experimental hut station Cové, Benin exposed to diagnostic doses of insecticides in WHO cylinder bioassays. Error bars represent 95 % confidence intervals

Resistance intensity bioassays

The results on dose–response studies comparing the Cové and Kisumu strain are presented in Table 1. The LD50 values were 0.0004 µg/ml for Kisumu and 0.083 µg/ml for the Cové strain. This resulted in a resistance ratio (RR) of 200-fold in the wild Cové compared to the Kisumu strain.

Table 1 Intensity of pyrethroid (alpha-cypermethrin) resistance in Anopheles gambiae sl from experimental hut station in Cové, Benin

PBO synergist bioassays

Mortality in CDC bottles treated with permethrin alone was 100 % with the Kisumu strain but only 32 % with the Cové population (Fig. 5). Pre-exposure of the Cové population to PBO resulted in a significant increase in mortality to 50 % (P < 0.05), suggesting at least some involvement of P450 detoxification enzymes in permethrin resistance in this vector population.

Fig. 5
figure 5

Mortality (%) of wild Anopheles gambiae sl from Phase II experimental hut station Cové, Benin exposed to permethrin in CDC bottle bioassays with and without the synergist PBO. Error bars represent 95 % confidence intervals

Efficacy of standard pyrethroid LLIN and IRS in experimental huts in Cové, Benin

Results of the efficacy of standard pyrethroid LLINs and IRS in experimental huts in Cové, Benin are presented in Fig. 6. Mortality with the control net was 5 %. Mortality did not exceed 30 % with any of the pyrethroid treatments tested. The pyrethroid LLINs induced higher mortality rates (29 % with Olyset Net and 22 % with Interceptor 1) than the pyrethroid IRS treatments (8 % with deltamethrin and 12 % with alphacypermethrin).

Fig. 6
figure 6

Mortality (%) of pyrethroid resistance Anopheles gambiae sl in experimental huts in Cové, Benin treated with standard pyrethroid LLINs and IRS products. Error bars represent 95 % confidence intervals

Species identification

Species identification PCR results revealed that the vector population was 100 % An. gambiae (N = 187). SINE PCR results showed that the population consisted of a mixture of the Anopheles coluzzii and An. gambiae s.s., the proportions of which showed seasonal variation. Twenty-three per cent of 89 samples collected in the dry season were An. gambiae s.s. while no An. gambiae s.s. was found in samples collected during the rainy season (N = 169); Chi-sq = 29.2, 1 df, P = 6 × 10−8.

Target site resistance alleles

Overall, 1014F allele frequency in the Cové population was 89 % (n = 247), and this did not vary significantly between samples collected in the rainy and dry seasons (P > 0.05) (Table 2). No 1014S alleles were found, and only one heterozygote for the N1575Y mutation was identified. The ace-1 119S allele was also very rare.

Table 2 Frequency of target site resistance alleles in Anopheles gambiae sl from experimental hut station in Cové, Benin

Microarray results

Genes meeting the thresholds for significant over-expression in the microarray studies are presented in Fig. 7. A total of 113 probes covering 83 genes were significantly over-expressed in the Cové deltamethrin- and permethrin-resistant pools relative to the Kisumu and NGousso pools, and several of these are known detoxification genes. Using equivalent criteria for under-expression, 16 probes covering 12 genes were detected. The majority of the significantly differentially expressed genes do not have known roles in insecticide resistance, including those with highest statistical confidence and fold-change (the full table of results is given in Additional file 1). Of the detoxification genes, highlighted in Fig. 7, there are two cytochrome P450s, CYP6P3 and CYP9K1, a glutathione S-transferase GSTs1, a thioredoxin gene, TRX2, and superoxide-dismutase, SOD1. The best known of these genes in terms of resistance association, CYP6P3, is over-expressed in Cové at an average level of approximately four times compared to the susceptible strains.

Fig. 7
figure 7

Genes significantly over-expressed (relative to susceptibles) in pyrethroid-resistant Anopheles gambiae sl from experimental hut station in Cové, Benin

Discussion

The current study was designed to provide an in-depth characterization of the genotype and resistance profile of An. gambiae s.l. at a newly constructed experimental hut station in Cové, Benin, being used for WHOPES Phase II evaluation of novel IRS and LLIN products that are expected to show improved performance against pyrethroid-resistant mosquito vectors and potentially manage resistance. Characterizing the vector population in an experimental hut site is crucial to the accurate interpretation of results obtained in the evaluation of such products.

For any given experimental hut study, a minimum average hut-entry rate is usually required for the study to have enough statistical power to demonstrate the expected impact [22]. As expected of most rice growing areas in West Africa, the Cové experimental hut site is characterized by very high mosquito vector densities, which resulted in high hut-entry rates, making the site suitable for most Phase II product evaluation studies. Nevertheless, the results also showed seasonality in vector density linked to the rice cropping season with the lowest hut entry recorded in the months of June–September, a period during which no rice growing activity is ongoing and rice paddies are dry. Assuming that the rice cropping seasons in Cové remain unchanged, plans have been made to exclude this period where possible when planning hut evaluation studies in this site.

The resistance bioassays demonstrated very high levels of phenotypic resistance to pyrethroids and DDT in the Cové wild An. gambiae s.l. population, revealing a resistance ratio of 20-fold (compared to a susceptible laboratory strain) which far exceeds the minimum of ten-fold set by the VCAG for the evaluation of new LLINs with efficacy claims against highly pyrethroid-resistant mosquitoes [15]. This was confirmed by the low mortality rates (<30 %) achieved with standard WHOPES-approved pyrethroid LLINs and IRS in the experimental huts in Cové. Mortality rates of >80 % with pyrethroid IRS and insecticide-treated nets have been reported in earlier experimental hut studies in a previously pyrethroid-susceptible area in Benin [23]. The findings here constitute further evidence of the poor performance of current pyrethroid IRS and LLIN products when confronted with highly pyrethroid-resistant vector populations [9, 14, 23, 24]. The novel IRS and LLIN products being tested in the experimental huts in Cové involve non-pyrethroid classes of insecticide with new modes of action to which there are currently no records of resistance in malaria vectors; hence, improved mortality rates are expected.

The genotyping results revealed that the vector population in the Cové experimental hut station is composed of a mixture of An. coluzzii and An. gambiae s.s. with their relative abundance varying through the course of the year. While all samples genotyped from the March cropping season (start of the rainy season in 2014) were An. coluzzi, An. gambiae s.s. was found in a smaller proportion (23 %) only in samples that were collected at the start of the October annual rice cropping season in the Cové site (start of the dry season in 2013). Seasonal variation in these two sub-species of An. gambiae has been reported in several areas in West Africa [25, 26]. Unlike the An. coluzzi which is well adapted to rice paddies in West Africa, An. gambiae s.s. tends to occupy transitory man-made breeding sites, such as pits, ponds and puddles which are more likely to exist in the dry season in Cové. Nevertheless, because both species contribute similarly to disease transmission and are anthropophilic and endophilic [26], they can be equally targeted by the various novel IRS and LLIN products being evaluated in the experimental huts in Cové. Further studies are underway to investigate the extent of the variation in both vector sub-species in Cové through the course of the year, in relation to other human activities at the site and to assess the impact it may have on phenotypic resistance to pyrethroids.

The resistance genotyping studies suggests that the pyrethroid resistance encountered in the Cové vector population could be partly attributable to high frequencies of the 1014F kdr allele (0.89 allele frequency), with the 1014S mutation absent and the 1575Y allele very rare. The latter should be monitored however because it can effectively double the resistance conferred by 1014F alone [19]. Ace-1 119S was also very rare, which likely explains the lack of any carbamate or organophosphate resistance. However, again this requires monitoring because it is strongly diagnostic of resistance to each insecticide class [27] and can confer very high resistance in combination with P450 metabolic enzymes [28]. Indeed, some vector populations in West Africa with high frequencies of pyrethroid resistance mutations and the ace-1 119S mutation are resistant to all current classes of insecticides [29]. The PBO synergism data suggested a moderate impact of P450 enzymes in resistance, which was confirmed by the microarray study that identified two P450 genes as over-expressed in pyrethroid-selected An. coluzzi in Cové. Of these, CYP6P3 has been previously validated as a metabolizer of class I and II pyrethroids [30] and bendiocarb to a lesser extent [28]. CYP6P3 has been reported as over-expressed in pyrethroid-resistant field populations of An. gambiae s.l. from Dodowa in Ghana [31], Akron and Gbejromede in Benin, Orugun in Nigeria [32], and Tiassale in Côte d’Ivoire [28] and is thus operationally considered a key diagnostic marker of pyrethroid resistance. Further studies will be needed to investigate the other genes which were over-expressed in the microarray study for their roles in conferring pyrethroid resistance.

Conclusion

In addition to improving the control of pyrethroid-resistant malaria vectors, the novel LLIN and IRS products evaluated at the Cové site are expected to also manage pyrethroid resistance since they are treated with insecticide mixtures [4, 33]. To investigate this, surviving mosquitoes from the different experimental hut treatments have been preserved in RNAlater for further studies comparing their capacity to prevent selection on insecticide resistance genes. Based on the microarray results obtained in the present study, CYP6P3 can be considered a suitable candidate gene for investigating selection of metabolic resistance to pyrethroids in follow-up quantitative real time PCR studies.

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Authors’ contributions

CN, RN, DW, and MR designed the study. CN JF, KS, AF, and AO performed the experiments, CN and DW analysed the data. CN wrote the paper and DW, KS and MR made important contributions to the manuscript. The fieldwork was supervised by CN, RN and MA. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Acknowledgements

We thank Prof Hilary Ranson (LSTM) for coordinating molecular analysis and Damien Todjinou and Achille Oumbouke (CREC) for field assistance. The study was funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation through the Innovative Vector Control Consortium (IVCC).

Competing interests

The authors declare they have no competing interests.

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Correspondence to Corine Ngufor.

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Ngufor, C., N’Guessan, R., Fagbohoun, J. et al. Insecticide resistance profile of Anopheles gambiae from a phase II field station in Cové, southern Benin: implications for the evaluation of novel vector control products. Malar J 14, 464 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-015-0981-z

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