| Literature DB >> 32158404 |
Ahmed Al-Rofaai1, Lesley Bell-Sakyi1.
Abstract
Ticks and the diseases they transmit are of huge veterinary, medical and economic importance worldwide. Control of ticks attacking livestock and companion animals is achieved primarily by application of chemical or plant-based acaricides. However, ticks can rapidly develop resistance to any new product brought onto the market, necessitating an ongoing search for novel active compounds and alternative approaches to tick control. Many aspects of tick and tick-borne pathogen research have been facilitated by the application of continuous cell lines derived from some of the most economically important tick species. These include cell lines derived from acaricide-susceptible and resistant ticks, cell sub-lines with in vitro-generated acaricide resistance, and genetically modified tick cells. Although not a replacement for the whole organism, tick cell lines enable studies at the cellular and molecular level and provide a more accessible, more ethical and less expensive in vitro alternative to in vivo tick feeding experiments. Here we review the role played by tick cell lines in studies on acaricide resistance, mode-of-action of acaricides, identification of potential novel control targets through better understanding of tick metabolism, and anti-tick vaccine development, that may lead to new approaches to control ticks and tick-borne diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Ixodes spp.; Rhipicephalus microplus; acaricide; anti-tick vaccine; control; metabolism; resistance; tick cell line
Year: 2020 PMID: 32158404 PMCID: PMC7052283 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.00152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Tick cell lines used in studies on tick control reviewed in this article.
| Tick species | Distribution | Economic importance | Cell line | Geographic origin of parent ticks | Original references |
| Worldwide tropical and sub-tropical | Serious ectoparasitic pest of cattle; transmits anaplasmosis and babesiosis; high propensity to develop acaricide resistance | BmVIII-SCC | Mexico | ||
| BME26 | Mexico | ||||
| BME/CTVM2 | Costa Rica | ||||
| BME/CTVM5 | Colombia | ||||
| BME/CTVM6 | Colombia | ||||
| BME/CTVM23 | Mozambique | ||||
| BME/CTVM30 | Mozambique | ||||
| East, Central and Southern Africa | Transmits East Coast fever of cattle and Nairobi sheep disease | RAN/CTVM3 | Kenya | ||
| RA243 | East Africa | ||||
| Sub-Saharan Africa | Transmits equine babesiosis, bovine anaplasmosis and causes tick toxicosis in ruminants | REN/CTVM32 | South Africa | ||
| Worldwide tropical, sub-tropical and temperate | Transmits canine babesiosis, ehrlichioses and human rickettsioses | RSE/PILS35 | France | ||
| RML-RSE | United States | ||||
| Europe | Transmits borreliosis, neoehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis, babesiosis, tick-borne encephalitis, louping ill | IRE/CTVM19 | United Kingdom | ||
| IRE/CTVM20 | United Kingdom | ||||
| North America | Transmits Lyme borreliosis, human anaplasmosis and babesiosis, Powassan encephalitis | IDE8 | United States | ||
| ISE6 | United States |
Acaricides and pesticides used with tick cell lines in studies on tick control reviewed in this article.
| Name | Chemical class | Route of application to animals | Mode of action |
| Amitraz | Amidines | Spot-on, spraying and dipping | Has an antagonistic effect on octopaminergic G protein-coupled receptors of the nerve cells causing paralysis and hyperexcitation in ticks |
| Coumaphos | Organophosphate compounds | Spraying and dipping | Acts on the nervous system as an inhibitor of transmission of nervous signals causing paralysis in the parasite |
| Fipronil | Phenylpyrazole compounds | Pour-on, spot-on and spraying | Inhibitor of GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid), a key neurotransmitter in the central nervous system. |
| Ivermectin | Avermectins (macrocyclic lactones) | Pour-on, orally and by injection | Acts as inhibitor of GABA causing neuromuscular blockage, also opens chloride ion channels in membranes of the nervous system and further depresses neuronal function. |
| Paraquat | Dipyridylium (viologen) | Not applied to animals | A highly toxic herbicide known to induce oxidative stress in cells because of its ability to induce generation of superoxide ions |
| Permethrin | Synthetic pyrethroids | Pour-on, spot-on, spraying and dipping | Acts on the membrane of nerve cells blocking the closure of the ion gates of the sodium channel during re-polarization, and thereby disrupts transmission of nervous impulses. |