Dudzic Jan P, Kondo Shu, Ueda Ryu, Bergman Casey M, Lemaitre Bruno
Global Health Institute, School of Life Sciences, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Station 19, 1015, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Invertebrate Genetics Laboratory, Genetic Strains Research Center, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, 411-8540, Japan.
BMC Biol. 2015 Oct 1;13:81. doi: 10.1186/s12915-015-0193-6.
The diversification of immune systems during evolution involves the expansion of particular gene families in given phyla. A better understanding of the metazoan immune system requires an analysis of the logic underlying such immune gene amplification. This analysis is now within reach due to the ease with which we can generate multiple mutations in an organism. In this paper, we analyze the contribution of the three Drosophila prophenoloxidases (PPOs) to host defense by generating single, double and triple mutants. PPOs are enzymes that catalyze the production of melanin at the site of infection and around parasites. They are the rate-limiting enzymes that contribute to the melanization reaction, a major immune mechanism of arthropods. The number of PPO-encoding genes is variable among insects, ranging from one in the bee to ten in the mosquito.
By analyzing mutations alone and in combination, we ascribe a specific function to each of the three PPOs of Drosophila. Our study confirms that two PPOs produced by crystal cells, PPO1 and PPO2, contribute to the bulk of melanization in the hemolymph, upon septic or clean injury. In contrast, PPO3, a PPO restricted to the D. melanogaster group, is expressed in lamellocytes and contributes to melanization during the encapsulation process. Interestingly, another overlapping set of PPOs, PPO2 and PPO3, achieve melanization of the capsule upon parasitoid wasp infection.
The use of single or combined mutations allowed us to show that each PPO mutant has a specific phenotype, and that knocking out two of three genes is required to abolish fully a particular function. Thus, Drosophila PPOs have partially overlapping functions to optimize melanization in at least two conditions: following injury or during encapsulation. Since PPO3 is restricted to the D. melanogaster group, this suggests that production of PPO by lamellocytes emerged as a recent defense mechanism against parasitoid wasps. We conclude that differences in spatial localization, immediate or late availability, and mode of activation underlie the functional diversification of the three Drosophila PPOs, with each of them having non-redundant but overlapping functions.
免疫系统在进化过程中的多样化涉及特定门类中特定基因家族的扩增。要更好地理解后生动物的免疫系统,需要分析这种免疫基因扩增背后的逻辑。由于我们能够轻松地在生物体中产生多个突变,现在进行这种分析已成为可能。在本文中,我们通过构建单突变、双突变和三突变体来分析果蝇的三种前酚氧化酶(PPO)对宿主防御的贡献。PPO是在感染部位和寄生虫周围催化黑色素生成的酶。它们是节肢动物主要免疫机制——黑化反应的限速酶。昆虫中编码PPO的基因数量各不相同,从蜜蜂中的1个到蚊子中的10个不等。
通过单独和组合分析突变,我们确定了果蝇的三种PPO各自的特定功能。我们的研究证实,晶体细胞产生的两种PPO,即PPO1和PPO2,在败血症或清洁损伤后,对血淋巴中的大部分黑化反应起作用。相比之下,PPO3是仅存在于黑腹果蝇组中的一种PPO,在片层细胞中表达,并在包囊过程中促进黑化。有趣的是,另一组重叠的PPO,即PPO2和PPO3,在寄生蜂感染后使包囊黑化。
使用单突变或组合突变使我们能够表明每个PPO突变体都有特定的表型,并且要完全消除特定功能需要敲除三个基因中的两个。因此,果蝇PPO在至少两种情况下具有部分重叠的功能,以优化黑化反应:受伤后或包囊过程中。由于PPO3仅存在于黑腹果蝇组中,这表明片层细胞产生PPO是一种针对寄生蜂的近期防御机制。我们得出结论,三种果蝇PPO在空间定位、即时或延迟可用性以及激活方式上的差异是其功能多样化的基础,它们各自具有非冗余但重叠的功能。