State Key Laboratory of Rice Biology & Key Laboratory of Molecular Biology of Crop Pathogens and Insects of Ministry of Agriculture, Institute of Insect Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, China.
BMC Genomics. 2010 Sep 2;11:484. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-11-484.
The relationships between parasitoids and their insect hosts have attracted attention at two levels. First, the basic biology of host-parasitoid interactions is of fundamental interest. Second, parasitoids are widely used as biological control agents in sustainable agricultural programs. Females of the gregarious endoparasitoid Pteromalus puparum (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) inject venom along with eggs into their hosts. P. puparum does not inject polydnaviruses during oviposition. For this reason, P. puparum and its pupal host, the small white butterfly Pieris rapae (Lepidoptera: Pieridae), comprise an excellent model system for studying the influence of an endoparasitoid venom on the biology of the pupal host. P. puparum venom suppresses the immunity of its host, although the suppressive mechanisms are not fully understood. In this study, we tested our hypothesis that P. puparum venom influences host gene expression in the two main immunity-conferring tissues, hemocytes and fat body.
At 1 h post-venom injection, we recorded significant decreases in transcript levels of 217 EST clones (revealing 113 genes identified in silico, including 62 unknown contigs) derived from forward subtractive libraries of host hemocytes and in transcript levels of 288 EST clones (221 genes identified in silico, including 123 unknown contigs) from libraries of host fat body. These genes are related to insect immune response, cytoskeleton, cell cycle and apoptosis, metabolism, transport, stress response and transcriptional and translational regulation. We verified the reliability of the suppression subtractive hybridization (SSH) data with semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis of a set of randomly selected genes. This analysis showed that most of the selected genes were down-regulated after venom injection.
Our findings support our hypothesis that P. puparum venom influences gene expression in host hemocytes and fat body. Specifically, the venom treatments led to reductions in expression of a large number of genes. Many of the down-regulated genes act in immunity, although others act in non-immune areas of host biology. We conclude that the actions of venom on host gene expression influence immunity as well as other aspects of host biology in ways that benefit the development and emergence of the next generation of parasitoids.
寄生蜂与其昆虫宿主之间的关系在两个层面上引起了关注。首先,宿主-寄生蜂相互作用的基础生物学具有根本的重要性。其次,寄生蜂被广泛用作可持续农业计划中的生物防治剂。群居内寄生蜂 Pteromalus puparum(膜翅目:Pteromalidae)在产卵的同时将毒液与卵一起注入其宿主中。P. puparum 在产卵时不会注入多粒病毒。因此,P. puparum 及其蛹宿主小菜粉蝶 Pieris rapae(鳞翅目:Pieridae)构成了研究内寄生蜂毒液对蛹宿主生物学影响的绝佳模型系统。P. puparum 毒液抑制了其宿主的免疫力,尽管抑制机制尚未完全了解。在这项研究中,我们检验了这样一个假设,即 P. puparum 毒液会影响宿主在两个主要的免疫组织——血细胞和脂肪体中的基因表达。
在毒液注射后 1 小时,我们记录到宿主血细胞正向消减文库中 217 个 EST 克隆(揭示了 113 个在计算机中鉴定的基因,包括 62 个未知的连续序列)和宿主脂肪体文库中 288 个 EST 克隆(221 个在计算机中鉴定的基因,包括 123 个未知的连续序列)的转录本水平显著降低。这些基因与昆虫免疫反应、细胞骨架、细胞周期和凋亡、代谢、运输、应激反应以及转录和翻译调控有关。我们通过对一组随机选择的基因进行半定量 RT-PCR 分析,验证了抑制性消减杂交(SSH)数据的可靠性。该分析表明,毒液注射后,大多数选定的基因表达下调。
我们的发现支持这样一个假设,即 P. puparum 毒液会影响宿主血细胞和脂肪体中的基因表达。具体来说,毒液处理导致大量基因表达减少。下调的基因中有许多参与免疫,但也有其他参与宿主生物学非免疫领域的基因。我们得出结论,毒液对宿主基因表达的作用影响免疫以及宿主生物学的其他方面,从而有利于下一代寄生蜂的发育和出现。