Characterization of Pyrethroid Action on Ciliary Calcium Channels in Paramecium tetraurelia

Type-II pyrethroids, including deltamethrin, are highly toxic to Paramecium tetraurelia, an organism that does not possess a voltage-sensitive sodium channel. Previous research has established that deltamethrin is toxic to P. tetraurelia in mortality bioassays at concentrations as low as 10−10 and 1...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inPesticide biochemistry and physiology Vol. 65; no. 3; pp. 181 - 193
Main Authors Symington, Steven B., Zhang, Aiguo, Karstens, William, Van Houten, Judith, Marshall Clark, J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published San Diego, CA Elsevier Inc 01.11.1999
Elsevier
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Type-II pyrethroids, including deltamethrin, are highly toxic to Paramecium tetraurelia, an organism that does not possess a voltage-sensitive sodium channel. Previous research has established that deltamethrin is toxic to P. tetraurelia in mortality bioassays at concentrations as low as 10−10 and 10−11 M under resting and depolarizing conditions, respectively. Deltamethrin, likewise, stimulated P. tetraurelia backward-swimming behavior, an avoidance behavioral response that is controlled exclusively by Ca2+ uptake via the voltage-sensitive calcium channels associated with the cilia. We have now characterized the action of various calcium channel agonists and antagonists on the avoidance behavior and Ca2+ influx in P. tetraurelia and have determined that the voltage-sensitive calcium channel associated with the cilia is blocked by the divalent cation Ni2+ but is insensitive to octanol and amiloride. Radioisotope tracer experiments, using whole cells under resting conditions, established that the toxic 1R isomer of deltamethrin resulted in increased Ca2+ influx, while the nontoxic 1S enantiomer produced no significant effect. Pawn mutants, which lack a functional voltage-sensitive calcium channel, were unaffected by deltamethrin. Fluorescent bioassays, under depolarizing conditions, corroborated behavioral and radioisotope experiments. Specifically, these experiments established that deltamethrin stimulated Ca2+ uptake in a stereospecfic manner and that this uptake was blocked by the phenethylamine-type calcium channel blocker D595 under physiological conditions. Deltamethrin treatment resulted in a dose-dependent increase in Ca2+ uptake and membrane depolarization with concentrations as low as 10−11 M. Electrophysiological recordings of whole cells showed that treatment of 10−9 M deltamethrin resulted in membrane destabilization, increased number of spontaneous action potentials, prolonged repetitive discharges following stimulation, membrane depolarization, and death by osmotic lysis. Our findings establish that the toxic effect of deltamethrin is structurally related, dose dependent, and enhanced by depolarization and provide substantial evidence that Type-II pyrethroids, specifically deltamethrin, act as potent calcium channel agonists on the ciliary voltage-sensitive calcium channel of P. tetraurelia.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:0048-3575
1095-9939
DOI:10.1006/pest.1999.2444