Stoepler Teresa M, Castillo Julio C, Lill John T, Eleftherianos Ioannis
Department of Biological Sciences, The George Washington University.
J Vis Exp. 2012 Nov 15(69):e4173. doi: 10.3791/4173.
Insect hemocytes (equivalent to mammalian white blood cells) play an important role in several physiological processes throughout an insect's life cycle. In larval stages of insects belonging to the orders of Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies) and Diptera (true flies), hemocytes are formed from the lymph gland (a specialized hematopoietic organ) or embryonic cells and can be carried through to the adult stage. Embryonic hemocytes are involved in cell migration during development and chemotaxis regulation during inflammation. They also take part in cell apoptosis and are essential for embryogenesis. Hemocytes mediate the cellular arm of the insect innate immune response that includes several functions, such as cell spreading, cell aggregation, formation of nodules, phagocytosis and encapsulation of foreign invaders. They are also responsible for orchestrating specific insect humoral defenses during infection, such as the production of antimicrobial peptides and other effector molecules. Hemocyte morphology and function have mainly been studied in genetic or physiological insect models, including the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, the mosquitoes Aedes aegypti and Anopheles gambiae and the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta. However, little information currently exists about the diversity, classification, morphology and function of hemocytes in non-model insect species, especially those collected from the wild. Here we describe a simple and efficient protocol for extracting hemocytes from wild caterpillars. We use penultimate instar Lithacodes fasciola (yellow-shouldered slug moth) (Figure 1) and Euclea delphinii (spiny oak slug) caterpillars (Lepidoptera: Limacodidae) and show that sufficient volumes of hemolymph (insect blood) can be isolated and hemocyte numbers counted from individual larvae. This method can be used to efficiently study hemocyte types in these species as well as in other related lepidopteran caterpillars harvested from the field, or it can be readily combined with immunological assays designed to investigate hemocyte function following infection with microbial or parasitic organisms.
昆虫血细胞(相当于哺乳动物的白细胞)在昆虫整个生命周期的多个生理过程中发挥着重要作用。在鳞翅目(蛾类和蝶类)和双翅目(实蝇)昆虫的幼虫阶段,血细胞由淋巴腺(一种专门的造血器官)或胚胎细胞形成,并可延续到成虫阶段。胚胎血细胞参与发育过程中的细胞迁移以及炎症期间的趋化性调节。它们还参与细胞凋亡,对胚胎发育至关重要。血细胞介导昆虫先天免疫反应的细胞免疫分支,该反应包括多种功能,如细胞铺展、细胞聚集、结节形成、吞噬作用以及对外来入侵者的包囊化。它们还负责在感染期间协调昆虫的特定体液防御,例如抗菌肽和其他效应分子的产生。血细胞的形态和功能主要在遗传或生理昆虫模型中进行研究,包括果蝇、黑腹果蝇、埃及伊蚊和冈比亚按蚊等蚊子以及烟草天蛾、烟草天蛾。然而,目前关于非模式昆虫物种中血细胞的多样性、分类、形态和功能的信息很少,尤其是从野外采集的那些昆虫。在这里,我们描述了一种从野生毛虫中提取血细胞的简单有效方法。我们使用末龄前的黄肩蛞蝓蛾(图1)和刺栎蛞蝓毛虫(鳞翅目:刺蛾科),并表明可以从单个幼虫中分离出足够体积的血淋巴(昆虫血液)并对血细胞数量进行计数。该方法可用于有效研究这些物种以及从野外采集的其他相关鳞翅目毛虫中的血细胞类型,或者可以很容易地与旨在研究感染微生物或寄生虫后血细胞功能的免疫测定相结合。