Metabolic considerations in pyrethroid design
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Xenobiotica
- Vol. 22 (9-10) , 1185-1194
- https://doi.org/10.3109/00498259209051872
Abstract
1. Synthetic pyrethroids, based on the naturally-occurring insecticidal components of pyrethrum extract, emerged in the 1970s as the fourth major chemical class of synthetic insecticides. They are widely used today in the control of agriculture and household pests and disease vectors. 2. Early efforts in the design of synthetic analogues focused on the need to identify novel structural moieties that preserved or enhanced intrinsic insecticidal activity while eliminating known sites of metabolic and photolytic attack in the natural compounds. Subsequent efforts focused on achieving high levels of insecticidal activity while minimizing costs of synthesis and retaining desirable levels of selective toxicity. 3. The synthetic compounds obtained in these efforts constitute a group of insecticides having unprecedented biological activity against target species with low acute toxicity to mammals. 4. The evolutionary development of the pyrethroids illustrates how knowledge of metabolic fate can contribute to the design of novel insecticides with improved insecticidal activity and selective toxicity.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- The pyrethroids: Early discovery, recent advances and the futurePesticide Science, 1989
- Pyrethroid toxicology: Mouse intracerebral structure-toxicity relationshipsPesticide Biochemistry and Physiology, 1982
- Permethrin metabolism in ratsJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 1977
- Insecticidally Active Conformations of PyrethroidsPublished by American Chemical Society (ACS) ,1974
- Synthetic insecticide with a new order of activityNature, 1974
- A Photostable PyrethroidNature, 1973
- Substrate-specificity and toxicological significance of pyrethroid-hydrolyzing esterases of mouse liver microsomesPesticide Biochemistry and Physiology, 1973
- Metabolic fate of pyrethrin I, pyrethrin II, and allethrin administered orally to ratsJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 1972
- Metabolic fate of resmethrin, 5-benzyl-3-furylmethyl dl-trans-chrysanthemate in the ratPesticide Biochemistry and Physiology, 1971
- 5-Benzyl-3-furylmethyl Chrysanthemate: a New Potent InsecticideNature, 1967