Chromobacterium biopesticide overcomes insecticide resistance in malaria vector mosquitoes | Science Advances
Abstract
Vector mosquito control is an integral part of malaria control. The global emergence of insecticide resistance in malaria-transmitting
Anophelines
has become an impediment and has created an urgent need for novel mosquito control approaches. Here, we show that a biopesticide derived from the soil-dwelling bacterium
Chromobacterium
sp. Panama (
Csp_P
) kills insecticide-resistant
Anopheles
mosquitoes, regardless of their resistance mechanisms. In addition, sublethal dose of
Csp_P
acts as a synergist to now used chemical insecticides across multiple classes. Moreover,
Csp_P
reduces host-seeking behavior and malaria parasite infection in vector mosquitoes in ways that further decrease transmission. Mosquito glutathione
S
-transferases are essential for
Csp_P
’s mosquito-killing mechanism. Enclosed field trials in Burkina Faso, conducted in diverse ecological settings and supported by a mathematical model, have now demonstrated its potential for malaria control in settings with widespread insecticide resistance.