New weapon for war on mosquitoes

Rothamsted Research

Disrupting a mosquito's sense of smell can ward off a bug bite.

Researchers say that they’ve found a new class of chemicals that can drive away mosquitoes by disrupting their odor-sensing system — and the first chemical in that class seems to be thousands of times more effective than DEET.

The compound, called VUAA1, was identified thanks to the kind of high-throughput screening process that is more typically used for drug discovery, said Vanderbilt University professor Laurence Zwiebel, a member of the research team. Zwiebel and his colleagues published their findings online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"This compound is really a first-in-class molecule to do this action," Zwiebel told me today.


A mosquito's olfactory system relies on a variety of receptors spread out on the bug's antennae — known odorant receptors, or ORs. The receptors are tuned to respond to different types of odors, including the smell of sweat and blood, and they activate switches called OR co-receptors (Orcos) to tell the mosquito's brain which scent is being picked up.

Researchers screened almost 120,000 small-molecule compounds to check their effects on human embryonic kidney cells that were genetically engineered to include the OR-Orco complexes.  "It was totally a shotgun approach," Zwiebel said. "Throw the kitchen sink at it and see what happens."

The scientists were surprised to find that VUAA1 consistently activated the odor-sensing complexes, even though it's not actually considered an odorant. "It wasn't something we set out to find. It was an anomaly in our tests," another member of the Vanderbilt team, graduate student David Rinker, said in a news release.

"If a compound like VUAA1 can activate every mosquito odorant receptor at once, then it could overwhelm the insect's sense of smell, creating a repellent effect akin to stepping onto an elevator with someone wearing too much perfume, except this would be far worse for the mosquito," said Patrick Jones, a postdoctoral fellow at Vanderbilt who is the study's first author. 

Zwiebel said that he and his colleagues compared the effectiveness of VUAA1 with that of the widely used DEET insect repellant by measuring how much of each compound it took to repel larval mosquitoes in a petri dish. "The more you use, the more the mosquito moves, as if it's trying to get out of Dodge," he explained. A tiny amount of VUAA1 had the same repellent effect as a concentration of DEET that was tens of thousands of times stronger, Zwiebel said.

However, Zwiebel stressed that VUAA1 isn't yet ready for prime time. "The commercialization of this compound has hardly begun," he said. The chemical still has to be fine-tuned and checked for toxicity, and it's possible that other chemicals in the same class will turn out to be more effective or safer. Vanderbilt University says it has filed for a patent on this class of chemicals and is talking with potential corporate licensees about commercialization, with special focus on the development of products to reduce the spread of malaria in the developing world.

Zwiebel noted that VUAA1 has been found to activate the odor-sensing complexes of flies, moths and ants as well. "Basically, every insect that has an olfactory system has this Orco ion channel," he told me. "We have an expectation that every insect will be affected by this molecule. Now, that's both good and bad."

It's good, because the new class of chemicals may yield new ways to drive away other types of nuisance insects and agricultural pests. But it'd be bad if they also drove away beneficial bugs such as bees and butterflies.

"We've all read 'Silent Spring,'" Zwiebel said. "We don't want to have the same DDT story."

More about mosquitoes:


In addition to Jones, Rinker and Zwiebel, authors of "Functional Agonism of Insect Odorant Receptor Ion Channels" include Gregory M. Pask. VUAA1 stands for Vanderbilt University Allosteric Agonist 1. The research was supported by the Grand Challenges in Global Health Initiative, funded by the Foundation for the NIH through a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

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Discuss this post

Quick! Let's spray on ourselves and everything else before we learn if it is bad for us!

Sounds like we won't be making that mistake this time. They better do considerable testing on short and long term effects on the body. I hate how drugs are released to be used without long term analysis. They are gambling with lives.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Mon May 9, 2011 11:11 PM EDT

How long should a company study "long term effects" before releasing products to market? Five, ten, fifteen, twenty years (at which point generics can steal your hard work for pennies on the thousands of R&D dollars)? It's easy to ask for long term clinical studies, then harder to ask a company to forfeit monopoly-years on a drug which may mean no recoup of R&D money. If you can't recoup, then it means outsourcing R&D overseas to make things less painful.

  • 2 votes
#1.1 - Tue May 10, 2011 2:29 AM EDT

'Tis greed, 'tis greed. So many times they have done short term studies, decided that was good enough, and started selling the product, only to find later on that users of it develop health problems. Companies want to start selling it ASAP for money, and customers may find themselves too impatient to wait, either.

    #1.2 - Tue May 10, 2011 7:39 AM EDT
    Reply

    It sounds as if this same chemical in low concentrations could be used to attract mosquitoes into solar powered bug zappers, possibly with the added help of solar powered infared LEDs. This could one day be used to put an end to mosquito borne diseases like malaria and yellow fever in a totally safe environmental way, at least if the access to these bug zappers was also screened to limit access to certain sizes of pests. - Rick Carter

      Reply#2 - Mon May 9, 2011 11:36 PM EDT

      What I find ironic here is that Professor Zwiebel has found an oderant that will overwhelm a mosquito's sense of smell and Zwiebel means 'onion' in German.

      • 3 votes
      Reply#3 - Tue May 10, 2011 6:18 AM EDT

      Like the bees don't have enough problems (caused by humans) - let's add some more chemicals to their environment?

        Reply#5 - Tue May 10, 2011 9:37 AM EDT

        Here's, I dunno, kind of a wild idea, but how about eradicating the pests, period? I don't buy the tired old line about the "food chain" being disrupted if they disappear. It's a fact that if a creature is hungry enough, they'll find something else to munch on.

          Reply#6 - Tue May 10, 2011 11:03 AM EDT

          War on mosquitoes? How much of my taxes are going towards this?! I'm outraged!!!

          • 1 vote
          Reply#7 - Tue May 10, 2011 3:41 PM EDT

          @PrecededByNone - The now 100 plus year old war on mosquitoes has protected you and millions of other Americans from dying of Malaria and Yellow Fever, among other diseases, once common in the U.S.

            #7.1 - Tue May 10, 2011 5:29 PM EDT

            I hope you noted my sarcasm...

            • 1 vote
            #7.2 - Tue May 10, 2011 6:09 PM EDT

            Sorry, you sounded like a Libtard. (There are those who really think that way, you know.)

              #7.3 - Tue May 10, 2011 8:38 PM EDT
              Reply

              How about developing a way to genetically modify humans so this, (or a related compound), is excreted in our sweat? That way it won't be sprayed all over the place, affecting beneficial insects. It might even reduce the chance of other insect bites and stings.

                Reply#8 - Tue May 10, 2011 5:26 PM EDT

                Please, whenthis "product" is developed, make it applicable to the skin and clothing for use during camping and other outdoor activities and NOT for use on farm fields and wood lots, etc. Most insects are beneficial in some way - either as food for other creatures or as destroyers of harmful bugs. When in the development stage, please think about all aspects of its' development. Thanks.

                  Reply#9 - Wed May 11, 2011 8:53 AM EDT

                  In Africa, they use Cashew Nut shells very effectively. Mosquitoes hate the smell of them.

                  I just saved you millions in Tax Payer money with FREE  Advice from a 'non - expert'!!!

                    Reply#10 - Thu May 12, 2011 10:43 AM EDT

                    Not everybody can use Cashew Nut Shell products due to allergies. The nut shell liquid and the fruit contain the same compound that causes reaction to poison ivy.

                      #10.1 - Fri May 13, 2011 12:40 AM EDT
                      Reply

                      Umm this is a good thing and bad thing, because like any insect they become accustom to anything you throw at them!

                      so eventually this will be ineffective as deet was, sure it will kill a few million of them, the best thing is to grow pine! mosquitoes hate pine!

                        Reply#11 - Mon May 16, 2011 6:15 PM EDT
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