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Pesticides

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Pesticides Definition of a Pesticide US EPA - any substance or mixture of substances intended for preventing, destroying, repelling, or mitigating any pest. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pesticides


1
Pesticides
2
Definition of a Pesticide
  • US EPA - any substance or mixture of substances
    intended for preventing, destroying, repelling,
    or mitigating any pest. The term pest means any
    harmful, destructive, or troublesome animals,
    plants, or microorganisms.

3
History of Pesticides
  • Sulfur used as a fumigant by the Chinese before
    1000 B.C. and as a fungicide in the 1800s in
    Europe against powdery mildew on fruit Sulfur
    containing compounds are still used in CA today.
  • The Chinese applied moderate amounts of
    arsenic-containing compounds as insecticides in
    the 16th century. In the 1800s arsenic trioxide
    was used as a weed killer.

4
History (Continued)
  • The 1930s ushered in the era of modern synthetic
    chemistry.
  • By the beginning of WWII there were a number of
    synthetic pesticides.

5
Pesticides
  • It is important to appreciate
  • despite the modern day development of second- and
    third- generation derivatives of the early
    chemical pesticides, all pesticides are
    inherently toxic to some living organism,
    otherwise they would be of no practical use.
  • There is no such thing as a completely safe
    pesticide.

6
Human Problems
  • Target species and nontarget species can be
    affected.
  • On a world wide basis, intoxications due to
    pesticides are estimated to be 3 million cases of
    acute, severe poisoning annually with an equal
    number of unreported cases, and some 220,000
    deaths.
  •  In CA, 25,000 cases of pesticide-related
    illness occur annually among agricultural
    workers. National 80,000 cases per year.

7
Pesticide Regulation
  • Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide
    Act of 1947.
  • Taken over by EPA in 1972. Each pesticide has a
    registration requirement that must include
    appropriate chemical, toxicological, and
    environmental impact studies. There are label
    specifications, use restrictions and tolerances
    for pesticide residues on raw agricultural
    products. The EPA is responsible for monitoring
    pesticide residue levels in foods.

8
Pesticide Regulation
  • Studies related to environmental impact on birds,
    mammals, aquatic organisms, plants, soils,
    environmental persistence, and bioaccumulation
    are required.
  •  
  • The average development cost for a new pesticide
    is on the order of 30 - 50 million .

9
Insecticides
  • All of the chemical insecticides in use today are
    neurotoxicants and they act by poisoning the
    nervous system of target (also non-target)
    organisms.
  •  Classes of Insecticides
  • Organochlorine Insecticides
  • Organophosphate/Carbamate Insecticides
  • Pyrethroid Insecticides

10
Organochlorine Insecticides
  • The organochlorine (chlorinated hydrocarbon)
    insecticides are a diverse group of agents
    belonging to the following chemical classes
  •  
  • dichlorodiphenylethanes
  • chlorinated cyclodienes
  • chlorinated benzenes
  • chlorinated cyclohexanes

11
Organochlorines (Continued)
  • These agents were used extensively from the mid
    1940s to the mid 1960s in all aspects of
    agriculture and forestry, building and structural
    protection, and in human situations to control a
    wide variety of insect pests.

12
Organochlorines (Continued)
  • Properties which made them good insecticides
  • low volatility
  • chemical stability
  • lipid solubility
  • slow rate of biotransformation and degradation

13
Organochlorines (Continued)
  • These properties also led to their demise because
    of their persistence in the environment,
    bioaccumulation, and biomagnification through the
    food chains.

14
Organochlorines (Continued)
  • Studies in wildlife species and laboratory
    animals have demonstrated potent estrogenic and
    enzyme-inducing properties, which interfere with
    fertility and reproduction.
  • In birds, the interference is related to steroid
    metabolism and the inability of the bird to
    mobilize sufficient calcium to produce a strong
    eggshell. Eggshell cracking allows bacteria into
    the egg, which kills the embryo.

15
Organochlorines (Continued)
  • Reproduction in fish is affected by the
    bioconcentrations of these agents in the yolk-sac
    of fry.
  • The o,p'-isomer of DDT has been shown to compete
    with estradiol for binding with the estrogen
    receptor in rat uterine cells.

16
Typical Mechanism of Action
  • For DDT Type Pesticides
  • periodic sequences of persistent tremoring and/or
    convulsive seizures suggestive of repetitive
    discharges in neurons.
  • these tremors, seizures can be initiated by
    tactile and auditory stimuli, indicating that the
    sensory nervous system appears to be much more
    responsive to stimuli.

17
Chlorinated Cyclodiene-, Benzene- and
Cyclohexane- type Insecticides
  • These insecticides act in the CNS. 
  • (1) Mimic the action of the chemical picrotoxin,
    a nerve excitant and antagonist of the
    neurotransmitter GABA found in the CNS.
  • GABA induces the uptake of chloride ions by
    neurons.
  • The blockage of this uptake results in only
    partial repolarization of the neuron and a state
    of uncontrolled excitation.

18
(Continued)
  • (2) Inhibitors of Na/K ATPase and Ca/Mg ATPase
    that is essential for the transport of Ca
    across membranes.
  • The inhibition of Ca/Mg ATPase located in
    synaptic terminals of neurons results in an
    accumulation of intracellular free Ca which
    stimulates neurotransmitter release,
    depolarization of adjacent neurons, and
    propagation of stimuli throughout the CNS.

19
Metabolism of Compounds
  • Very slow rate for DDT due to complex aromatic
    ring structure and chlorination. Half-life is
    335 days in cattle.
  • DDT broken down to DDE both nonenzymatically and
    by cytochrome P450 reductive dechlorination. All
    metabolites are highly lipophilic.

20
Metabolism (Continued)
  • Biotransformation is also slow for
    cyclodiene-type insecticides.
  • Aldrin and Heptachlor are converted by cytochrome
    P450 oxidation reactions to dieldrin and
    heptachlor epoxide without a change in lipid
    solubility or toxicity.

21
Organophosphate / Carbamate Pesticides
  • 200 different organophosphate insecticides
  •  
  • 25 different carbamate insecticides
  •  
  • These two types of insecticides are considered
    together because they have a similar mechanism of
    action.

22
(Continued)
  • Organophosphorus insecticides were first
    synthesized in 1937 by German chemists as
    potential chemical warfare agents.
  • Sarin is an organophosphate compound that was
    used against Kurdish people in northern Iraq in
    1988.
  • The first carbamates were synthesized in the
    1930s as fungicides.

23
Mechanism of Action
  • Both organophosphate and carbamate insecticides
    act by inhibiting the action of
    acetylcholinesterase (AchEase) at the synapse
    between two neurons or between a motor neuron and
    a muscle.
  • AChEase is the enzyme responsible for the
    breakdown of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine
    (ACh). 
  • Organophosphate compounds are irreversible
    inhibitors of AChEase while carbamate compounds
    are reversible inhibitors of AChEase.

24
Mechanism (Continued)
  • The reaction between an organophosphate and the
    active site on AChEase (a serine hydroxyl group)
    results in the formation of an intermediate that
    undergoes partial hydroylsis with the loss of the
    "Z" group, leaving a stable, phosphorylated,
    permanently inhibited enzyme.
  • Signs and symptoms are prolonged and persistent.
    Without intervention, the toxicity will persist
    until sufficient amounts of "new" AChEase are
    synthesized in 20 to 30 days.

25
Mechanism (Continued)
  • Carbamate compounds attach to the serine hydroxyl
    group, the "X" group is removed by hydrolysis
    forming a carbamylated enzyme, and then
    decarbamylation occurs regenerating free, active
    AChEase.
  • Carbamate pesticides are really just poor
    substrates for AChEase.

26
Metabolism
  • Both types of insecticides undergo extensive
    metabolism in all forms of life. The routes and
    rates are highly species specific. Both phase I
    and phase II mechanisms are involved.
  • One reaction, oxidative desulphuration, results
    in a significant increase in toxicity. In
    parathion, methyl parathion and malathion, the
    presence of the P S reduces the AChEase
    inhibiting properties of the compound.

27
Mechanism (Continued)
  • There is a characteristic prolongation of the
    falling phase of the action potential. The nerve
    membrane remains in a partially depolarized state
    and is extremely sensitive to complete
    depolarization again by very small stimuli.
  • See handout

28
Why Prolonged Repolarization
  • (1) DDT affects the permeability of the nerve
    cell membrane to K ions reducing K transport
    across the membrane. 
  • (2) DDT alters the Na channels, they open
    normally but are closed (inactivated) slowly. 
  • (3) DDT inhibits neuronal ATPase activity
    particularly Na/K ATPase and Ca ATPase which play
    a role in repolarization of the neuron.

29
Why (Continued)
  • All of these factors reduce the rate at which
    repolarization occurs and increase the
    sensitivity of the neurons to small stimuli that
    would not elicit a response in a fully
    repolarized neuron.

30
Pyrethroid Insecticides
  • This is the newest class of insecticides, a group
    of chemicals that entered the marketplace in 1980
    but by 1982 accounted for approx. 30 of
    worldwide insecticide use.
  • These synthetic chemicals are similar to the
    insecticides extracted from pyrethrum or
    chrysanthemum flowers.

31
Pyrethroids (Continued)
  • Type I pyrethroids affect Na channels in nerve
    membranes (both sensory and motor) and gives long
    afterpotential similar to DDT.
  • Type II pyrethroids cause persistent
    depolarization and prolonged repetitive firing of
    sensory receptors and muscle fibers.
  • Both types also inhibit Ca/Mg ATPase resulting in
    increased intracellular Ca levels and increased
    neurotransmitter release.
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