Author:
Xu Pingxi,Choo Young-Moo,Chen Zhou,Zeng Fangfang,Tan Kaiming,Chen Tsung-Yu,Cornel Anthony J.,Liu Nannan,Leal Walter S.
Abstract
AbstractHow chemical signals are integrated at the peripheral sensory system of insects is still an enigma. Here we show that when coexpressed with Orco in Xenopus oocytes, an odorant receptor from the southern house mosquito, CquiOR32, generated inward (regular) currents when challenged with cyclohexanone and methyl salicylate, whereas eucalyptol and fenchone elicited inhibitory (upward) currents. Responses of CquiOR32-CquiOrco-expressing oocytes to odorants were reduced in a dose-dependent fashion by coapplication of inhibitors. This intrareceptor inhibition was also manifested in vivo in fruit flies expressing the mosquito receptor CquiOR32, as well in neurons on the antennae of the southern house mosquito. Likewise, an orthologue from the yellow fever mosquito, AaegOR71, showed intrareceptor inhibition in the Xenopus oocyte recording system and corresponding inhibition in antennal neurons. Intrareceptor inhibition was also manifested in mosquito behavior. Blood-seeking females were repelled by methyl salicylate, but repellence was significantly reduced when methyl salicylate was coapplied with eucalyptol.One Sentence SummaryIntrareceptor inhibition was observed in mosquito odorant receptors expressed in heterologous systems, in vivo, and manifested in behavioral responses.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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