New Class of Insecticide Announced
Research teams at Nihon Nohyaku Co., Ltd., Bayer CropScience, and DuPont have developed
two new broad-spectrum insecticides that show promise as safer and more effective ways to fight
pest insects that damage food crops. The insecticides, which represent
the first synthetic compounds designed to activate a novel insecticide
target called the ryanodine receptor, may also help tackle the growing
problem of insecticide resistance. Currently, many of `the most widely
used insecticides today act on only a handful of exploited physiological
targets, such as those that interfere with acetylcholinesterase, an enzyme
that helps control nerve activity. Some experts are concerned that
resistance and cross-resistance may lead to reduced efficacy, so there are
efforts to replace these materials with those that have a different mode of action.
Targeting the ryanodine receptor may offer a promising alternative. Ryanodine, a natural
alkaloid discovered years ago in a species of tropical plant, has been used to study muscle
physiology in a wide variety of organisms, including insects and mammals. Ryanodine receptors
regulate muscle and nerve activities by modifying levels of internal calcium in these cells. These
receptors exist in both mammals and insects but have distinct differences. Researchers have
known that ryanodine itself has insecticidal properties, but until now, no synthetic molecules had
been identified that potently and selectively target these receptors in insects.
Nihon Nohyaku Co., Ltd., based in Japan, and Bayer CropScience AG in Germany have jointly
developed flubendiamide, the first example of the phthalic acid diamides, a novel group of
insecticides that activate the ryanodine receptor. The insecticide is highly effective against many
different species of caterpillars, says Masanori Tohnishi, a senior research scientist at Nihon
Nohyaku. In early tests, the compound showed high activity against the tobacco budworm
(Heliothis virescens), which is known to cause serious damage to cotton, tobacco and other
crops. The compound did not have any measurable effect on mammalian ryanodine receptors,
according to Peter Lüümmen, Ph.D., a research scientist at Bayer CropScience.
DuPont, based in Wilmington, DE, is developing another group of compounds that target the
ryanodine receptor. Called anthranilic diamides, these novel compounds show excellent control
of pest insects with exceptional mammalian safety, according to the researchers. They were the
first to demonstrate the mode of action of these ryanodine receptor-active molecules, says Daniel
Cordova, a researcher at DuPont Crop Protection. Both classes of compounds have high
potency, the researchers say, although they are structurally different. Both insecticides are still
in developmental stages. The research team at DuPont says they have cloned ryanodine
receptors from several insect species and that these receptors may help provide a better
understanding of their role in calcium signaling, which could lead to new insights into human
diseases. (American Chemical Society release, 8/25/05).