Publications by authors named "Lianyun Lin"

Article Synopsis
  • The resistance of pests to insecticides is a growing global problem that impacts food production, particularly with widely used diamide insecticides which target insect ryanodine receptors (RyRs).
  • Using advanced techniques like chimeric RyR and cryo-electron microscopy, researchers studied how different diamide insecticides interact with RyRs and how this relates to emerging resistance mutations.
  • The study reveals how these resistance mutations change the receptor's structure, reducing the effectiveness of insecticides, and offers insights for developing new pesticides that can overcome these resistance challenges.
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Article Synopsis
  • Diamide insecticides are popular for their effectiveness and low toxicity to non-target organisms, but resistance to them has been increasing, impacting agricultural sustainability.
  • Researchers developed 28 new types of diamide insecticides with nitrophenyl substitutions and found that some compounds had strong pest-killing activity.
  • One compound was significantly more potent than a common diamide insecticide in cells with resistance mutations, hinting at a potential solution for controlling resistant pests.
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Glucose oxidase (GOX) is a representative compound found in most insect saliva that can suppress plant-defensive responses. However, little is known about the origin and role of GOX in the crucifer-specialized pest . In this study, we showed obvious regurgitation from the larval gut of and identified abundant peptides highly similar to known GOX.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focused on how mutations in the ryanodine receptor (RyR) of agricultural pests impact the effectiveness of diamide insecticides, which target these receptors to control pest populations.
  • Five HEK293 cell lines expressing different RyR variants were created to assess the activity of six commercial insecticides, revealing cyantraniliprole (CYAN) as the most effective against resistant RyRs, while flubendiamide exhibited high selectivity for insects.
  • The research employed fluorescence assays and molecular modeling to explore the actions of these insecticides, offering insights into pest resistance mechanisms and strategies for developing more effective and selective insecticides.
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Metabolic resistance is one of the most frequent mechanisms of insecticide resistance, characterized by an increased expression of several important enzymes and transporters, especially cytochrome P450s (CYPs). Due to the large number of P450s in pests, determining the precise relationship between these enzymes and the insecticide substrates is a challenge. Herein, we developed a luminescence-based screening system for efficient identification of insecticide substrates and insect P450 inhibitors.

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Snustorr snarlik (Snsl) is a type of extracellular protein essential for insect cuticle formation and insect survival, but is absent in mammals, making it a potential selective target for pest control. Here, we successfully expressed and purified the Snsl protein of Plutella xylostella in Escherichia coli. Two truncated forms of Snsl protein, Snsl 16-119 and Snsl 16-159, were expressed as a maltose-binding protein (MBP) fusion protein and purified to a purity above 90% after a five-step purification protocol.

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Ryanodine receptor (RyR) is a giant calcium release channel located on the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Here, we report the regulation of RyRs from two major agricultural pests, diamondback moth and fall armyworm, by insect calmodulin (CaM). The recombinantly expressed full-length insect RyR could be pulled down by insect CaM in the presence of Ca, but the efficiency is lower compared to rabbit RyR1 and insect RyR with the CaM-binding domain (CaMBD) replaced by rabbit RyR1 sequence.

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Several mutations identified in phospholamban (PLN) have been linked to familial dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and heart failure, yet the underlying molecular mechanism remains controversial. PLN interacts with sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase (SERCA) and regulates calcium uptake, which is modulated by the protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent phosphorylation of PLN during the fight-or-flight response. Here, we present the crystal structures of the catalytic domain of mouse PKA in complex with wild-type and DCM-mutant PLNs.

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Apolygus lucorum could cause severe economic damage to crops in China. The pest has been controlled by pyrethroids, and the target of pyrethroids is voltage-gated sodium channel (Na). Double mutation (LF/DG) was detected in a field-strain of A.

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Idiopathic ventricular fibrillation (IVF) causes sudden death in young adult patients without structural or ischemic heart disease. Most IVF cases are sporadic and some patients present with short-coupled torsade de pointes, the genetics of which are poorly understood. A man who had a first syncope at the age of 35 presented with frequent short-coupled premature ventricular beats with bursts of polymorphic ventricular tachycardia and then died suddenly.

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Cytosolic carboxypeptidases (CCPs) comprise a unique subfamily of M14 carboxypeptidases and are erasers of the reversible protein posttranslational modification- polyglutamylation. Potent inhibitors for CCPs may serve as leading compounds targeting imbalanced polyglutamylation. However, no efficient CCP inhibitor has yet been reported.

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The diamide insecticide class is one of the top-selling insecticides globally. They are used to control a wide range of pests by targeting their ryanodine receptors (RyRs). Here, we report the highest-resolution cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structure of RyR1 in the open state, in complex with the anthranilic diamide chlorantraniliprole (CHL).

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Ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are the molecular target of diamides, a new chemical class of insecticides. Diamide insecticides are used to control lepidopteran pests and were considered relatively safe for mammals and non-targeted beneficial insects, including honey bees. However, recent studies showed that exposure to diamides could cause long-lasting locomotor deficits of bees.

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Experimental 3D structures of calcium channels with phenylalkylamines (PAAs) provide basis for further analysis of atomic mechanisms of these important cardiovascular drugs. In the crystal structure of the engineered calcium channel CavAb with Br-verapamil and in the cryo-EM structure of the Cav1.1 channel with verapamil, the ligands bind in the inner pore.

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2()-dihydroxypropanesulfonate (DHPS) is a microbial degradation product of 6-deoxy-6-sulfo-d-glucopyranose (sulfoquinovose), a component of plant sulfolipid with an estimated annual production of 10 tons. DHPS is also at millimolar levels in highly abundant marine phytoplankton. Its degradation and sulfur recycling by microbes, thus, play important roles in the biogeochemical sulfur cycle.

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Background: Pyrethroids are classified as type I and type II for distinct symptomology. Voltage-gated sodium channel is a primary target of pyrethroids. Mutations of the insect sodium channel have been identified to result in resistance to pyrethroids.

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The diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella is a cosmopolitan pest that has evolved resistance to all classes of insecticide, and costs the world economy an estimated US $4-5 billion annually. We analyse patterns of variation among 532 P. xylostella genomes, representing a worldwide sample of 114 populations.

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Ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are homotetrameric intracellular calcium (Ca) release channels responsible for excitation-contraction coupling of muscle cells. Diamide insecticides specifically act on RyRs of Lepidoptera and Coleoptera pests and are safe for nontargeted organisms, generating big worldwide sales. Despite their popularity, several devastating agricultural pests have been reported to be resistant to them because of mutations in a small transmembrane region of their RyRs, hinting a binding pocket nearby.

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Article Synopsis
  • Evolutionary adaptations in herbivorous insects, like Plutella xylostella, often involve counteracting plant defense mechanisms, such as glucosinolates.
  • The study utilized the CRISPR/Cas9 system to create mutant lines lacking the GSS1 or GSS2 genes, revealing that GSS2 significantly impacts embryonic and larval development, leading to lower survival rates when mutated.
  • The findings suggest both GSS1 and GSS2 are crucial for successful adaptation to host plants, opening avenues for further research into the functions of other sulfatases in herbivorous insects.
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Diamide insecticides targeting ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are a major class of pesticides used to control a wide range of agricultural pests, but their efficacies have been reduced dramatically by the recent emergence of resistance mutations. There is a pressing need to develop novel insecticides, targeting distinct and novel binding sites within insect RyRs to overcome the resistance crisis; however, the limited structural information on insect RyRs is a major roadblock to our understanding of their molecular mechanisms. Here, we report the crystal structure of the RyR SPRY2 domain from the diamondback moth (DBM), , a destructive agricultural pest worldwide that has developed resistance to all classes of insecticide at 2.

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Background: Diamide insecticides, including phthalic and anthranilic diamides, target insect ryanodine receptors (RyRs) and cause misregulation of calcium signaling in insect muscles and neurons. Several resistance mutations have been reported to reduce the efficacy of the diamides, but the exact binding sites and mechanism of resistance mutations are not clear.

Results: The recent breakthrough in structural studies of mammalian RyRs has deepened our understanding of these giant calcium-release channels, but structural information about insect RyRs is still scarce.

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DNA methylation exerts extensive impacts on gene expression of various living organisms exposed to environmental variation. However, little is known whether DNA methylation is involved in the host transfer of diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.), a worldwide destructive pest of crucifers.

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Hydroxyethylsulfonate (isethionate (Ise)) present in mammalian tissues is thought to be derived from aminoethylsulfonate (taurine), as a byproduct of taurine nitrogen assimilation by certain anaerobic bacteria inhabiting the taurine-rich mammalian gut. In previously studied pathways occurring in environmental bacteria, isethionate is generated by the enzyme sulfoacetaldehyde reductase IsfD, belonging to the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) family. An unrelated sulfoacetaldehyde reductase SarD, belonging to the metal-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase superfamily (M-ADH), was recently discovered in the human gut sulfite-reducing bacterium (SarD).

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Article Synopsis
  • Taurine aminotransferases are key enzymes in taurine breakdown for many bacteria, especially in the mammalian gut.
  • Researchers have characterized a new taurine:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (Toa) from gut bacteria, finding it has high specificity for 2-oxoglutarate.
  • The structure of Toa revealed it forms a homodimer and has important residues that interact with taurine, indicating its role in bacterial metabolism within the gut ecosystem.
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