GEPHE SUMMARY Print
Gephebase Gene
Entry Status
Published
GepheID
GP00001863
Main curator
Courtier
PHENOTYPIC CHANGE
Trait Category
Trait State in Taxon A
Hyalella azteca
Trait State in Taxon B
Hyalella azteca - resistant
Ancestral State
Data not curated
Taxonomic Status
Taxon A
Common Name
-
Synonyms
Hyalella azteca Saussure, 1858
Rank
species
Lineage
Show more ... sozoa; Panarthropoda; Arthropoda; Mandibulata; Pancrustacea; Crustacea; Multicrustacea; Malacostraca; Eumalacostraca; Peracarida; Amphipoda; Senticaudata; Talitrida; Talitroidea; Hyalellidae; Hyalella
NCBI Taxonomy ID
is Taxon A an Infraspecies?
No
Taxon B
Common Name
-
Synonyms
Hyalella azteca Saussure, 1858
Rank
species
Lineage
Show more ... sozoa; Panarthropoda; Arthropoda; Mandibulata; Pancrustacea; Crustacea; Multicrustacea; Malacostraca; Eumalacostraca; Peracarida; Amphipoda; Senticaudata; Talitrida; Talitroidea; Hyalellidae; Hyalella
NCBI Taxonomy ID
is Taxon B an Infraspecies?
No
GENOTYPIC CHANGE
Presumptive Null
No
Molecular Type
Aberration Type
SNP
SNP Coding Change
Nonsynonymous
Molecular Details of the Mutation
M918L - ATG>TTG - conferred by a TTG codon rather than CTG - The M918L TTG and the M918L CTG were both identified in the Chualar Creek (HighPU) population and have also been identified in populations of the green peach aphid M. persicae (Panini et al., 2015).
Experimental Evidence
Taxon A Taxon B Position
Codon ATG TTG -
Amino-acid Met Leu 918
Authors
Major KM; Weston DP; Lydy MJ; Wellborn GA; Poynton HC
Abstract
Pesticide runoff from terrestrial environments into waterways is often lethal to freshwater organisms, but exposure may also drive evolution of pesticide resistance. We analyzed the degree of resistance and molecular genetic changes underlying resistance in Hyalella azteca, a species complex of freshwater crustaceans inadvertently exposed to pesticide pollution via runoff. We surveyed 16 waterways encompassing most major watersheds throughout California and found that land use patterns are predictive of both pyrethroid presence in aquatic sediments and pyrethroid resistance in H. azteca. Nonsynonymous amino acid substitutions in the voltage-gated sodium channel including the M918L, L925I, or L925V confer resistance in H. azteca. The most frequently identified mutation, L925I, appears to be preferred within the species complex. The L925V substitution has been associated with pyrethroid resistance in another insect, but is novel in H. azteca. We documented a variety of pyrethroid resistance mutations across several species groups within this complex, indicating that pyrethroid resistance has independently arisen in H. azteca at least six separate times. Further, the high frequency of resistance alleles indicates that pesticide-mediated selection on H. azteca populations in waterways equals or exceeds that of targeted terrestrial pests. Widespread resistance throughout California suggests current practices to mitigate off-site movement of pyrethroids are inadequate to protect aquatic life from negative ecological impacts and implies the likelihood of similar findings globally.
Additional References
RELATED GEPHE
Related Genes
No matches found.
Related Haplotypes
5
EXTERNAL LINKS
COMMENTS
@Parallelism See other entry in Gephebase with same amino acid change in the same species complex, but involving a different nucleotide change. Pyrethroid resistance has independently arisen in H. azteca at least six separate times.
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