Rainer Sonneck
Bayer
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rainer Sonneck.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Sebastian Horstmann; Rainer Sonneck
Background Mosquito strains that exhibit increased tolerance to the chemical class of compounds with a sodium channel modulator mode of action (pyrethroids and pyrethrins) are typically described as “pyrethroid resistant”. Resistance to pyrethroids is an increasingly important challenge in the control of mosquito-borne diseases, such as malaria or dengue, because one of the main interventions (the distribution of large numbers of long-lasting insecticide-treated bed nets) currently relies entirely on long-lasting pyrethroids. Increasing tolerance of target insects against this class of insecticides lowers their impact in vector control. The current study suggests that the level of metabolic resistance depends on the structure of the molecule and that structurally different compounds may still be effective because detoxifying enzymes are unable to bind to these uncommon structures. Methods Treated surface contact bioassays were performed on susceptible Aedes aegypti, East African knockdown resistance (kdr) Anopheles gambiae (strain RSP-H) and metabolically resistant Anopheles funestus (strain FUMOZ-R) with different pyrethroids, such as cypermethrin, ß-cyfluthrin, deltamethrin, permethrin and transfluthrin (alone and in combination with the synergist piperonyl butoxide). The nonfluorinated form of transfluthrin was also assessed as a single agent and in combination with piperonyl butoxide. Results Although the dosages for pyrethroids containing a phenoxybenzyl moiety have exhibited differences in terms of effectiveness among the three tested mosquito species, the structurally different transfluthrin with a polyfluorobenzyl moiety remained active in mosquitoes with upregulated P450 levels. In trials with transfluthrin mixed with piperonyl butoxide, the added synergist exhibited no efficacy-enhancing effect. Conclusion The results of this study suggest that transfluthrin has the potential to control P450-mediated metabolically resistant mosquitoes because the structural formula of transfluthrin differs from that of the tested pyrethroids, which are used in vector control. The P450-detoxifying enzymes of the Anopheles funestus FUMOZ-R mosquitoes seem to bind preferably at the phenoxybenzyl moiety and appear to be unable to degrade transfluthrin with its tetrafluorobenzyl moiety. Inhibition of the class of monooxygenases by piperonyl butoxide revealed no increase of efficacy of the pure transfluthrin compound, which also indicates that the P450 enzymes potentially do not impact the efficacy of transfluthrin.
Archive | 1997
Kirkor Sirinyan; Ulrich Heukamp; Hubert Dorn; Ronald Helmut Stöcker; Rainer Sonneck; Rosemary Peter
Archive | 2009
Rainer Sonneck; Thomas Böcker; Karin Horn; Guenther Nentwig; Maren Heinemann; Thomas König
Archive | 1999
Kirkor Sirinyan; Karin Horn; Ronald Helmut Stöcker; Rainer Sonneck
Archive | 2011
Rainer Sonneck; Thomas Böcker; Karin Horn; Guenther Nentwig; Maren Heinemann; Thomas König
Archive | 2000
Kirkor Sirinyan; Reiner Pospischil; Rainer Sonneck; Ulrike Schneider
Archive | 2015
Maren Heinemann; Thomas Böcker; Karin Horn; Guenther Nentwig; Rainer Sonneck; Thomas König
Archive | 2011
Maren Heinemann; Thomas Böcker; Karin Horn; Guenther Nentwig; Rainer Sonneck; Thomas König
Archive | 2011
Volker Gutsmann; Thomas Böcker; Guenther Nentwig; Rainer Sonneck; Beate Hack; Daniel Gordon Duff
Archive | 2009
Johan Kijlstra; Frank Rosenfeldt; Guenther Nentwig; Volker Gutsmann; Rainer Sonneck; Douglas Ross