In vertebrates, cytochrome P450s of the CYP2 and CYP3 families play a dominant role in drug metabolism, while in insects
members of the CYP6 and CYP28 families have been implicated in metabolism of insecticides and toxic natural plant compounds.
A degenerate 3
′ RACE strategy resulted in the identification of fifteen novel P450s from an alkaloid-resistant species of
Drosophila. The strong (17.4-fold) and highly specific induction of a single gene (
CYP4D10) by the toxic isoquinoline alkaloids of a commonly utilized host-plant (saguaro cactus) provides the first indication that
members of the CYP4 family in insects may play an important role in the maintenance of specific insect-host plant relationships.
Strong barbiturate inducibility of
CYP4D10 and two other
D. mettleri P450 sequences of the CYP4 family was also observed, suggesting a pattern of xenobiotic responsiveness more similar to those
of several vertebrate drug-metabolizing enzymes than to putative vertebrate CYP4 homologs.
Key words Cytochrome P450 - Toxin resistance - Multigene family - Induction - Drosophila
Received: 14 August 1997 / Accepted: 24 March 1998