keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38363133/-drosophila-melanogaster-sting-mediates-coxiella-burnetii-infection-by-reducing-accumulation-of-reactive-oxygen-species
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rosa M Guzman, Nathan G Savolainen, Olivia M Hayden, Miyoung Lee, Chelsea A Osbron, Ziying Liu, Hong Yang, Dana K Shaw, Anders Omsland, Alan G Goodman
The Gram-negative bacterium Coxiella burnetii is the causative agent of query fever in humans and coxiellosis in livestock. C. burnetii infects a variety of cell types, tissues, and animal species including mammals and arthropods, but there is much left to be understood about the molecular mechanisms at play during infection in distinct species. Human stimulator of interferon genes (STING) induces an innate immune response through the induction of type I interferons (IFNs), and IFN promotes or suppresses C...
March 12, 2024: Infection and Immunity
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38324702/carbohydrate-binding-ability-of-a-recombinant-protein-containing-the-dm9-motif-from-drosophila-melanogaster
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tomomitsu Hatakeyama, Fuki Kojima, Issei Ohkawachi, Hitomi Sawai, Hideaki Unno
Proteins containing DM9 motifs, which were originally identified in the Drosophila melanogaster genome, are widely distributed in various organisms and are assumed to be involved in their innate immune response. In this study, we produced a recombinant protein of CG13321 (rCG13321) from D. melanogaster, which consists of four DM9 motifs, in Escherichia coli cells. In affinity chromatography using a mannose-immobilized column, rCG13321 exhibited mannose-binding ability and was separated into high-affinity and low-affinity fractions, named HA and LA, respectively, based on its binding ability to the column...
February 7, 2024: Journal of Biochemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38309271/the-genome-of-the-blind-bee-louse-fly-reveals-deep-convergences-with-its-social-host-and-illuminates-drosophila-origins
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Héloïse Bastide, Hélène Legout, Noé Dogbo, David Ogereau, Carolina Prediger, Julie Carcaud, Jonathan Filée, Lionel Garnery, Clément Gilbert, Frédéric Marion-Poll, Fabrice Requier, Jean-Christophe Sandoz, Amir Yassin
Social insects' nests harbor intruders known as inquilines,1 which are usually related to their hosts.2 , 3 However, distant non-social inquilines may also show convergences with their hosts,4 , 5 although the underlying genomic changes remain unclear. We analyzed the genome of the wingless and blind bee louse fly Braula coeca, an inquiline kleptoparasite of the western honey bee, Apis mellifera.6 , 7 Using large phylogenomic data, we confirmed recent accounts that the bee louse fly is a drosophilid8 , 9 and showed that it had likely evolved from a sap-breeder ancestor associated with honeydew and scale insects' wax...
January 29, 2024: Current Biology: CB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38295885/drosophila-cytokine-gbp2-exerts-immune-responses-and-regulates-gbp1-expression-through-gpcr-receptor-mthl10
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Masaya Ono, Takashi Matsumura, Eui Jae Sung, Takashi Koyama, Masanori Ochiai, Stephen B Shears, Yoichi Hayakawa
Growth-blocking peptide (GBP), an insect cytokine, was first found in armyworm Mythimna separata. A functional analogue of GBP, stress-responsive peptide (SRP), was also identified in the same species. SRP gene expression has been also demonstrated to be enhanced by GBP, indicating that both cytokines are organized within a hierarchical regulatory network. Although GBP1 (CG15917) and GBP2 (CG11395) have been identified in Drosophila melanogaster, immunological functions have only been characterized for GBP1...
January 29, 2024: Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38279019/drosophila-eif3f1-mediates-host-immune-defense-by-targeting-dtak1
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yixuan Hu, Fanrui Kong, Huimin Guo, Yongzhi Hua, Yangyang Zhu, Chuchu Zhang, Abdul Qadeer, Yihua Xiao, Qingshuang Cai, Shanming Ji
Eukaryotic translation initiation factors have long been recognized for their critical roles in governing the translation of coding RNAs into peptides/proteins. However, whether they harbor functional activities at the post-translational level remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that eIF3f1 (eukaryotic translation initiation factor 3 subunit f1), which encodes an archetypal deubiquitinase, is essential for the antimicrobial innate immune defense of Drosophila melanogaster. Our in vitro and in vivo evidence indicate that the immunological function of eIF3f1 is dependent on the N-terminal JAMM (JAB1/MPN/Mov34 metalloenzymes) domain...
January 26, 2024: EMBO Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38261932/-drosophila-parasitoids-go-to-space-unexpected-effects-of-spaceflight-on-hosts-and-their-parasitoids
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer Chou, Johnny R Ramroop, Amanda M Saravia-Butler, Brian Wey, Matthew P Lera, Medaya L Torres, Mary Ellen Heavner, Janani Iyer, Siddhita D Mhatre, Sharmila Bhattacharya, Shubha Govind
While fruit flies ( Drosophila melanogaster ) and humans exhibit immune system dysfunction in space, studies examining their immune systems' interactions with natural parasites in space are lacking. Drosophila parasitoid wasps modify blood cell function to suppress host immunity. In this study, naive and parasitized ground and space flies from a tumor-free control and a blood tumor-bearing mutant strain were examined. Inflammation-related genes were activated in space in both fly strains. Whereas control flies did not develop tumors, tumor burden increased in the space-returned tumor-bearing mutants...
January 19, 2024: IScience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38249074/the-lifespan-of-d-melanogaster-depends-on-the-function-of-the-gagr-gene-a-domesticated-gag-gene-of-drosophila-ltr-retrotransposons
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yevgenia Balakireva, Maria Nikitina, Pavel Makhnovskii, Inna Kukushkina, Ilya Kuzmin, Alexander Kim, Lidia Nefedova
(1) Background: The Gagr gene in Drosophila melanogaster 's genome originated from the molecular domestication of retrotransposons and retroviruses' gag gene. In all Drosophila species, the Gagr protein homologs exhibit a conserved structure, indicative of a vital role. Previous studies have suggested a potential link between the Gagr gene function and stress responses. (2) Methods: We compared flies with Gagr gene knockdown in all tissues to control flies in physiological tests and RNA-sequencing experiments...
January 17, 2024: Insects
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38206983/the-evolution-of-constitutively-active-humoral-immune-defenses-in-drosophila-populations-under-high-parasite-pressure
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shuyu Olivia Zhou, Ramesh Arunkumar, Amina Irfan, Shuai Dominique Ding, Alexandre B Leitão, Francis M Jiggins
Both constitutive and inducible immune mechanisms are employed by hosts for defense against infection. Constitutive immunity allows for a faster response, but it comes with an associated cost that is always present. This trade-off between speed and fitness costs leads to the theoretical prediction that constitutive immunity will be favored where parasite exposure is frequent. We selected populations of Drosophila melanogaster under high parasite pressure from the parasitoid wasp Leptopilina boulardi. With RNA sequencing, we found the evolution of resistance in these populations was associated with them developing constitutively active humoral immunity, mediated by the larval fat body...
January 11, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38189792/dna-damage-signaling-in-drosophila-macrophages-modulates-systemic-cytokine-levels-in-response-to-oxidative-stress
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fabian Hersperger, Tim Meyring, Pia Weber, Chintan Chhatbar, Gianni Monaco, Marc S Dionne, Katrin Paeschke, Marco Prinz, Olaf Groß, Anne-Kathrin Classen, Katrin Kierdorf
Environmental factors, infection, or injury can cause oxidative stress in diverse tissues and loss of tissue homeostasis. Effective stress response cascades, conserved from invertebrates to mammals, ensure reestablishment of homeostasis and tissue repair. Hemocytes, the Drosophila blood-like cells, rapidly respond to oxidative stress by immune activation. However, the precise signals how they sense oxidative stress and integrate these signals to modulate and balance the response to oxidative stress in the adult fly are ill-defined...
January 8, 2024: ELife
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38149028/markers-and-mechanisms-of-death-in-drosophila
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John Tower
Parameters correlated with age and mortality in Drosophila melanogaster include decreased negative geotaxis and centrophobism behaviors, decreased climbing and walking speed, and darkened pigments in oenocytes and eye. Cessation of egg laying predicts death within approximately 5 days. Endogenous green fluorescence in eye and body increases hours prior to death. Many flies exhibit erratic movement hours before death, often leading to falls. Loss of intestinal barrier integrity (IBI) is assayed by feeding blue dye ("Smurf" phenotype), and Smurf flies typically die within 0-48 h...
2023: Front Aging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38130722/activation-of-immune-defences-against-parasitoid-wasps-does-not-underlie-the-cost-of-infection
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandre B Leitão, Emma M Geldman, Francis M Jiggins
Parasites reduce the fitness of their hosts, and different causes of this damage have fundamentally different consequences for the evolution of immune defences. Damage to the host may result from the parasite directly harming its host, often due to the production of virulence factors that manipulate host physiology. Alternatively, the host may be harmed by the activation of its own immune defences, as these can be energetically demanding or cause self-harm. A well-studied model of the cost of infection is Drosophila melanogaster and its common natural enemy, parasitoid wasps...
2023: Frontiers in Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38117884/an-evolutionarily-conserved-serine-protease-network-mediates-melanization-and-toll-activation-in-drosophila
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tisheng Shan, Yang Wang, Krishna Bhattarai, Haobo Jiang
Melanization and Toll pathway activation are essential innate immune mechanisms in insects, which result in the generation of reactive compounds and antimicrobial peptides, respectively, to kill pathogens. These two processes are mediated by phenoloxidase (PO) and Spätzle (Spz) through an extracellular network of serine proteases. While some proteases have been identified in Drosophila melanogaster in genetic studies, the exact order of proteolytic activation events remains controversial. Here, we reconstituted the serine protease framework in Drosophila by biochemical methods...
December 22, 2023: Science Advances
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38084935/exploring-cross-protective-effects-between-cold-and-immune-stress-in-drosophila-melanogaster
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jakob Wiil, Jesper Givskov Sørensen, Hervé Colinet
It is well established that environmental and biotic stressors like temperature and pathogens/parasites are essential for the life of small ectotherms. There are complex interactions between cold stress and pathogen infection in insects. Possible cross-protective mechanisms occur between both stressors, suggesting broad connectivity in insect stress responses. In this study, the functional significance of these interactions was tested, as well as the potential role of newly uncovered candidate genes, turandot...
2023: Parasite: Journal de la Société Française de Parasitologie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38069549/ubiquitin-signalling-in-drosophila-innate-immune-responses
#34
REVIEW
Anna L Aalto, Veera Luukkonen, Annika Meinander
Cells respond to invading pathogens and danger signals from the environment by adapting gene expression to meet the need for protective effector molecules. While this innate immune response is required for the cell and the organism to recover, excess immune activation may lead to loss of homeostasis, thereby promoting chronic inflammation and cancer progression. The molecular basis of innate immune defence is comprised of factors promoting survival and proliferation, such as cytokines, antimicrobial peptides, and anti-apoptotic proteins...
December 8, 2023: FEBS Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38056530/serine-protease-homolog-pairs-clipa4-a6-a4-a7%C3%AE-and-a4-a12-act-as-cofactors-for-proteolytic-activation-of-prophenoloxidase-2-and-7-in-anopheles-gambiae
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Qiao Jin, Yang Wang, Yingxia Hu, Yan He, Chao Xiong, Haobo Jiang
Phenoloxidase (PO) catalyzed melanization and other insect immune responses are mediated by serine proteases (SPs) and their noncatalytic homologs (SPHs). Many of these SP-like proteins have a regulatory clip domain and are called CLIPs. In most insects studied so far, PO precursors are activated by a PAP (i.e., PPO activating protease) and its cofactor of clip-domain SPHs. Although melanotic encapsulation is a well-known refractory mechanism of mosquitoes against malaria parasites, it is unclear if a cofactor is required for PPO activation...
December 4, 2023: Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38045230/massively-parallel-mutant-selection-identifies-genetic-determinants-of-pseudomonas-aeruginosa-colonization-of-drosophila-melanogaster
#36
Jessica Miles, Gabriel L Lozano, Jeyaprakash Rajendhran, Eric V Stabb, Jo Handelsman, Nichole A Broderick
UNLABELLED: Pseudomonas aeruginosa is recognized for its ability to colonize diverse habitats and cause disease in a variety of hosts, including plants, invertebrates, and mammals. Understanding how this bacterium is able to occupy wide-ranging niches is important for deciphering its ecology. We used transposon sequencing (Tn-Seq, also known as INSeq) to identify genes in P. aeruginosa that contribute to fitness during colonization of Drosophila melanogaster . Our results reveal a suite of critical factors, including those that contribute to polysaccharide production, DNA repair, metabolism, and respiration...
November 21, 2023: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38029809/mild-traumatic-brain-injury-in-drosophila-melanogaster-alters-reactive-oxygen-and-nitrogen-species-in-a-sex-dependent-manner
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
T Bucky Jones, Tracy Mackey, Amber N Juba, Kush Amin, Amruth Atyam, Madison McDole, Jarod Yancy, Theresa Currier Thomas, Lori M Buhlman
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an outside force causing a modification in brain function and/or structural brain pathology that upregulates brain inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), instigating increased levels of nitric oxide activity which is implicated in secondary pathology leading to behavioral deficits (Hall et al., 2012; Garry et al., 2015; Kozlov et al., 2017). In mammals, TBI-induced NO production activates an immune response and potentiates metabolic crisis through mitochondrial dysfunction coupled with vascular dysregulation; however, the direct influence on pathology is complicated by the activation of numerous secondary cascades and activation of other reactive oxygen species...
November 27, 2023: Experimental Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38013113/the-identification-of-regulatory-cerna-network-involved-in-drosophila-toll-immune-responses
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yu Huang, Yujia Pang, Yina Xu, Li Liu, Hongjian Zhou
Non-coding RNAs play important roles in the innate immunity of Drosophila, with various lncRNAs and miRNAs identified to maintain Drosophila innate immune homeostasis by regulating protein functions. However, it remains unclear whether interactions between lncRNAs and miRNAs give rise to a ceRNA network. In our previous study, we observed the highest differential expression levels of lncRNA-CR11538, lncRNA-CR33942, and lncRNA-CR46018 in wild-type flies after Gram-positive bacterial infection, prompting us to investigate their role in the regulation of Drosophila Toll immune response through RNA-seq analysis...
November 25, 2023: Developmental and Comparative Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37993652/unravelling-the-genome-of-the-brackish-water-malaria-vector-anopheles-aquasalis
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rodrigo Maciel Alencar, Cesar Camilo Prado Sepulveda, Luis Martinez-Villegas, Ana Cristina Bahia, Rosa Amélia Santana, Igor Belém de Souza, Gigliola Mayara Ayres D'Elia, Ana Paula Marques Duarte, Marcus Vinicius Guimarães de Lacerda, Wuelton Marcelo Monteiro, Nágila Francinete Costa Secundino, Paulo Filemon Paolucci Pimenta, Leonardo Barbosa Koerich
Malaria is a severe public health problem in several developing tropical and subtropical countries. Anopheles aquasalis is the primary coastal malaria vector in Central and South America and the Caribbean Islands, and it has the peculiar feature of living in water with large changes in salinity. Recent research has recognised An. aquasalis as an important model for studying the interactions of murine and human Plasmodium parasites. This study presents the complete genome of An. aquasalis and offers insights into its evolution and physiology...
November 22, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37986870/transcriptional-profiling-of-drosophila-male-specific-p1-pc1-neurons
#40
Osama M Ahmed, Amanda Crocker, Mala Murthy
In Drosophila melanogaster , the P1 (pC1) cluster of male-specific neurons both integrates sensory cues and drives or modulates behavioral programs such as courtship, in addition to contributing to a social arousal state. The behavioral function of these neurons is linked to the genes they express, which underpin their capacity for synaptic signaling, neuromodulation, and physiology. Yet, P1 (pC1) neurons have not been fully characterized at the transcriptome level. Moreover, it is unknown how the molecular landscape of P1 (pC1) neurons acutely changes after flies engage in social behaviors, where baseline P1 (pC1) neural activity is expected to increase...
November 10, 2023: bioRxiv
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