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Dive into the research topics where Peter Maienfisch is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Maienfisch.


Pest Management Science | 2013

Investigating the mode of action of sulfoxaflor: a fourth-generation neonicotinoid.

Penny Cutler; Russell Slater; Andrew Edmunds; Peter Maienfisch; Roger Graham Hall; Fergus Gerard Paul Earley; Thomas Pitterna; Sitaram Pal; Verity-Laura Paul; Jim Goodchild; Melissa J. Blacker; Leonhard Hagmann; Andrew J. Crossthwaite

BACKGROUND The precise mode of action of sulfoxaflor, a new nicotinic acetylcholine receptor-modulating insecticide, is unclear. A detailed understanding of the mode of action, especially in relation to the neonicotinoids, is essential for recommending effective pest management practices. RESULTS Radiolabel binding experiments using a tritiated analogue of sulfoxaflor ([(3) H]-methyl-SFX) performed on membranes from Myzus persicae demonstrate that sulfoxaflor interacts specifically with the high-affinity imidacloprid binding site present in a subpopulation of the total nAChR pool. In competition studies, imidacloprid-like neonicotinoids displace [(3) H]-methyl-SFX at pM concentrations. The effects of sulfoxaflor on the exposed aphid nervous system in situ are analogous to those of imidacloprid and nitenpyram, and finally the high-affinity sulfoxaflor binding site is absent in a Myzus persicae strain (clone FRC) possessing a single amino acid point mutation (R81T) in the β-nAChR, a region critical for neonicotinoid interaction. CONCLUSION The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor pharmacological profile of sulfoxaflor in aphids is consistent with that of imidacloprid. Additionally, the insecticidal activity of sulfoxaflor and the current commercialised neonicotinoids is affected by the point mutation in FRC Myzus persicae. Therefore, it is suggested that sulfoxalfor be considered a neonicotinoid, and that this be taken into account when recommending insecticide rotation partnering for effective resistance management programmes.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Spiroindolines identify the vesicular acetylcholine transporter as a novel target for insecticide action.

Ann E. Sluder; Sheetal Shah; Jérôme Yves Cassayre; Ralph Clover; Peter Maienfisch; Louis-Pierre Molleyres; Elizabeth A. Hirst; Anthony J. Flemming; Min Shi; Penny Cutler; Carole Stanger; Richard Spurring Roberts; David Hughes; Thomas Flury; Mike Robinson; Elke Maria Hillesheim; Thomas Pitterna; Fredrik Cederbaum; Paul Anthony Worthington; Andrew J. Crossthwaite; John Windass; Richard A. Currie; Fergus Gerard Paul Earley

The efficacy of all major insecticide classes continues to be eroded by the development of resistance mediated, in part, by selection of alleles encoding insecticide insensitive target proteins. The discovery of new insecticide classes acting at novel protein binding sites is therefore important for the continued protection of the food supply from insect predators, and of human and animal health from insect borne disease. Here we describe a novel class of insecticides (Spiroindolines) encompassing molecules that combine excellent activity against major agricultural pest species with low mammalian toxicity. We confidently assign the vesicular acetylcholine transporter as the molecular target of Spiroindolines through the combination of molecular genetics in model organisms with a pharmacological approach in insect tissues. The vesicular acetylcholine transporter can now be added to the list of validated insecticide targets in the acetylcholine signalling pathway and we anticipate that this will lead to the discovery of novel molecules useful in sustaining agriculture. In addition to their potential as insecticides and nematocides, Spiroindolines represent the only other class of chemical ligands for the vesicular acetylcholine transporter since those based on the discovery of vesamicol over 40 years ago, and as such, have potential to provide more selective tools for PET imaging in the diagnosis of neurodegenerative disease. They also provide novel biochemical tools for studies of the function of this protein family.


Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B | 2006

Synthesis and Properties of Thiamethoxam and Related Compounds

Peter Maienfisch

The neonicotinoids are the most successful chemical class of insecticides reaching sales of more than


Pest Management Science | 2016

Binding of imidacloprid, thiamethoxam and N-desmethylthiamethoxam to nicotinic receptors of Myzus persicae: pharmacological profiling using neonicotinoids, natural agonists and antagonists

Hartmut Kayser; Katrin Lehmann; Marilyne Gomes; Wolfgang Schleicher; Karin Dotzauer; Margarethe Moron; Peter Maienfisch

1 billion in 2003, mainly due to the excellent market performance of imidacloprid and thiamethoxam. This paper describes the discovery, the synthesis and the insecticidal activity of thiamethoxam and related compounds and reports the hydrolytic stability and the degradation pathways of thiamethoxam together with the synthesis of the degradation products


Journal of Pesticide Science | 2017

The invertebrate pharmacology of insecticides acting at nicotinic acetylcholine receptors

Andrew J. Crossthwaite; Aurelien Bigot; Philippe Camblin; Jim Goodchild; Robert J. Lind; Russell Slater; Peter Maienfisch

BACKGROUND The increasing structural diversity of the neonicotinoid class of insecticides presently used in crop protection calls for a more detailed analysis of their mode of action at their cellular targets, the nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. RESULTS Comparative radioligand binding studies using membranes of Myzus persicae (Sulzer) and representatives of the chloropyridyl subclass (imidacloprid), the chlorothiazolyl subclass (thiamethoxam), the tetrahydrofuranyl subclass (dinotefuran), as well as the novel sulfoximine type (sulfoxaflor), which is not a neonicotinoid, reveal significant differences in the number of binding sites, the displacing potencies and the mode of binding interference. Furthermore, the mode of interaction of [3 H]thiamethoxam and the nicotinic antagonists methyllycaconitine and dihydro-β-erythroidine is unique, with Hill values of >1, clearly different to the values of around unity for [3 H]imidacloprid and [3 H]N-desmethylthiamethoxam. The interaction of [3 H]N-desmethylthiamethoxam with the agonist (-)nicotine is also characterised by a Hill value of >1. CONCLUSIONS There is no single conserved site or mode of binding of neonicotinoids and related nicotinic ligands to their target receptor, but a variety of binding pockets depending on the combination of receptor subunits, the receptor subtype, its functional state, as well as the structural flexibility of both the binding pockets and the ligands.


Pest Management Science | 2001

Chemistry and biology of thiamethoxam: a second generation neonicotinoid.

Peter Maienfisch; Max Angst; Franz Brandl; Willi Fischer; Dieter Hofer; Hartmut Kayser; Werner Kobel; Alfred Rindlisbacher; Robert Senn; Adrian Steinemann; Hansjürg Widmer

The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) is a ligand-gated ion channel composed of 5 protein subunits arranged around a central cation selective pore. Several classes of natural and synthetic insecticides mediate their effect through interacting at nAChRs. This review examines the basic pharmacology of the neonicotinoids and related chemistry, with an emphasis on sap-feeding insects from the order Hemiptera, the principle pest target for such insecticides. Although the receptor subunit stoichiometry for endogenous invertebrate nAChRs is unknown, there is clear evidence for the existence of distinct neonicotinoid binding sites in native insect preparations, which reflects the predicted wide repertoire of nAChRs and differing pharmacology within this insecticide class. The spinosyns are principally used to control chewing pests such as Lepidoptera, whilst nereistoxin analogues are used on pests of rice and vegetables through contact and systemic action, the pharmacology of both these insecticides is unique and different to that of the neonicotinoids.


Archive | 2008

Spiroheterocyclic pyrrolidine dione derivatives useful as pesticides

Werner Zambach; Ottmar Franz Hueter; Jean Wenger; Marcela Goeghova; Thomas Pitterna; Peter Maienfisch; Michel Muehlebach


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

New ventures in the chemistry of avermectins.

Thomas Pitterna; Jérôme Yves Cassayre; Ottmar Franz Hüter; Pierre M. J. Jung; Peter Maienfisch; Fiona Murphy Kessabi; Laura Quaranta; Hans Tobler


Pest Management Science | 2004

Comparative analysis of neonicotinoid binding to insect membranes: I. A structure–activity study of the mode of [3H]imidacloprid displacement in Myzus persicae and Aphis craccivora

Hartmut Kayser; Connie Lee; Arnaud Decock; Markus Baur; Joerg Haettenschwiler; Peter Maienfisch


Archive | 2009

SPIROHETEROCYCLIC N-OXYPIPERIDINES AS PESTICIDES

Michel Muehlebach; Thomas Pitterna; Jérôme Yves Cassayre; Andrew Edmunds; Camilla Corsi; Qacemi Myriem El; Roger Graham Hall; André Jeanguenat; André Stoller; Christopher Richard Ayles Godfrey; Juergen Schaetzer; Olivier Loiseleur; Peter Maienfisch; Neil Brian Carter

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