Pietri Jose E, Pakpour Nazzy, Napoli Eleonora, Song Gyu, Pietri Eduardo, Potts Rashaun, Cheung Kong W, Walker Gregory, Riehle Michael A, Starcevich Hannah, Giulivi Cecilia, Lewis Edwin E, Luckhart Shirley
Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of California Davis, Davis, CA, U.S.A.
Department of Molecular Biosciences, University of California Davis, Davis, CA, U.S.A.
Biochem J. 2016 Oct 15;473(20):3487-3503. doi: 10.1042/BCJ20160271. Epub 2016 Aug 5.
Insulin-like peptides (ILPs) play important roles in growth and metabolic homeostasis, but have also emerged as key regulators of stress responses and immunity in a variety of vertebrates and invertebrates. Furthermore, a growing literature suggests that insulin signaling-dependent metabolic provisioning can influence host responses to infection and affect infection outcomes. In line with these studies, we previously showed that knockdown of either of two closely related, infection-induced ILPs, ILP3 and ILP4, in the mosquito Anopheles stephensi decreased infection with the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum through kinetically distinct effects on parasite death. However, the precise mechanisms by which ILP3 and ILP4 control the response to infection remained unknown. To address this knowledge gap, we used a complementary approach of direct ILP supplementation into the blood meal to further define ILP-specific effects on mosquito biology and parasite infection. Notably, we observed that feeding resulted in differential effects of ILP3 and ILP4 on blood-feeding behavior and P. falciparum development. These effects depended on ILP-specific regulation of intermediary metabolism in the mosquito midgut, suggesting a major contribution of ILP-dependent metabolic shifts to the regulation of infection resistance and parasite transmission. Accordingly, our data implicate endogenous ILP signaling in balancing intermediary metabolism for the host response to infection, affirming this emerging tenet in host-pathogen interactions with novel insights from a system of significant public health importance.
胰岛素样肽(ILPs)在生长和代谢稳态中发挥着重要作用,但在多种脊椎动物和无脊椎动物中,它们也已成为应激反应和免疫的关键调节因子。此外,越来越多的文献表明,胰岛素信号依赖的代谢供应可以影响宿主对感染的反应并影响感染结果。与这些研究一致,我们之前表明,在斯氏按蚊中敲低两种密切相关的、感染诱导的ILPs(ILP3和ILP4)中的任何一种,通过对寄生虫死亡的动力学不同影响,降低了人类疟原虫恶性疟原虫的感染。然而,ILP3和ILP4控制感染反应的确切机制仍然未知。为了填补这一知识空白,我们采用了将ILP直接添加到血餐中的补充方法,以进一步确定ILP对蚊子生物学和寄生虫感染的特异性影响。值得注意的是,我们观察到喂食导致ILP3和ILP4对吸血行为和恶性疟原虫发育产生不同影响。这些影响取决于蚊子中肠中介代谢的ILP特异性调节,表明ILP依赖的代谢转变对感染抗性和寄生虫传播调节有重要贡献。因此,我们的数据表明内源性ILP信号在平衡宿主对感染反应的中介代谢中起作用,从一个具有重大公共卫生重要性的系统中获得的新见解证实了宿主-病原体相互作用中的这一新兴原则。