Field of Genetics, Genomics, and Development, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA; Department of Entomology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA; Cornell Institute of Host-Microbe Interactions and Disease, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Curr Biol. 2017 Feb 20;27(4):596-601. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.01.004. Epub 2017 Feb 9.
Hormonal signaling provides metazoans with the ability to regulate development, growth, metabolism, immune defense, and reproduction in response to internal and external stimuli. The use of hormones as central regulators of physiology makes them prime candidates for mediating allocation of resources to competing biological functions (i.e., hormonal pleiotropy) [1]. In animals, reproductive effort often results in weaker immune responses (e.g., [2-4]), and this reduction is sometimes linked to hormone signaling (see [5-7]). In the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, mating and the receipt of male seminal fluid proteins results in reduced resistance to a systemic bacterial infection [8, 9]. Here, we evaluate whether the immunosuppressive effect of reproduction in female D. melanogaster is attributable to the endocrine signal juvenile hormone (JH), which promotes the development of oocytes and the synthesis and deposition of yolk protein [10, 11]. Previous work has implicated JH as immunosuppressive [12, 13], and the male seminal fluid protein Sex Peptide (SP) activates JH biosynthesis in female D. melanogaster after mating [14]. We find that transfer of SP activates synthesis of JH in the mated female, which in turn suppresses resistance to infection through the receptor germ cell expressed (gce). We find that mated females are more likely to die from infection, suffer higher pathogen burdens, and are less able to induce their immune responses. All of these deficiencies are rescued when JH signaling is blocked. We argue that hormonal signaling is important for regulating immune system activity and, more generally, for governing trade-offs between physiological processes.
激素信号为后生动物提供了能力,使其能够根据内部和外部刺激来调节发育、生长、代谢、免疫防御和繁殖。激素作为生理的中枢调节剂,使其成为调节资源分配到竞争生物学功能的主要候选者(即激素多效性)[1]。在动物中,生殖努力通常会导致较弱的免疫反应(例如,[2-4]),并且这种减少有时与激素信号有关(见[5-7])。在果蝇,黑腹果蝇中,交配和接收雄性精液蛋白会导致对系统性细菌感染的抵抗力降低[8,9]。在这里,我们评估生殖对雌性黑腹果蝇的免疫抑制作用是否归因于内分泌信号保幼激素(JH),它促进卵母细胞的发育以及卵黄蛋白的合成和沉积[10,11]。先前的工作表明 JH 具有免疫抑制作用[12,13],并且雄性精液蛋白性肽(SP)在交配后激活雌性黑腹果蝇中的 JH 生物合成[14]。我们发现 SP 的转移激活了交配后雌性 JH 的合成,这反过来又通过生殖细胞表达的受体(gce)抑制了对感染的抵抗力。我们发现交配后的雌性更有可能死于感染,承受更高的病原体负担,并且更难以诱导其免疫反应。当 JH 信号被阻断时,所有这些缺陷都得到了挽救。我们认为,激素信号对于调节免疫系统活性以及更普遍地调节生理过程之间的权衡很重要。