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Can Virus-like Particles Be Used as Synergistic Agent in Pest Management?

Caroline DeshayesAnne-Sophie Gosselin-GrenetMylène OgliastroBruno LapiedVéronique Apaire-Marchais
Published in: Viruses (2022)
Among novel strategies proposed in pest management, synergistic agents are used to improve insecticide efficacy through an elevation of intracellular calcium concentration that activates the calcium-dependent intracellular pathway. This leads to a changed target site conformation and to increased sensitivity to insecticides while reducing their concentrations. Because virus-like particles (VLPs) increase the intracellular calcium concentration, they can be used as a synergistic agent to synergize the effect of insecticides. VLPs are self-assembled viral protein complexes, and by contrast to entomopathogen viruses, they are devoid of genetic material, which makes them non-infectious and safer than viruses. Although VLPs are well-known to be used in human health, we propose in this study the development of a promising strategy based on the use of VLPs as synergistic agents in pest management. This will lead to increased insecticides efficacy while reducing their concentrations.
Keyphrases
  • human health
  • aedes aegypti
  • cancer therapy
  • risk assessment
  • reactive oxygen species
  • magnetic resonance
  • climate change
  • genome wide
  • zika virus
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • copy number
  • protein protein
  • contrast enhanced