Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, 1664 N. Virginia St., Reno, NV 89557, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, 1664 N. Virginia St., Reno, NV 89557, USA.
J Invertebr Pathol. 2018 Jan;151:102-112. doi: 10.1016/j.jip.2017.11.006. Epub 2017 Nov 8.
Understanding the interaction between host plant chemistry, the immune response, and insect pathogens can shed light on host plant use by insect herbivores. In this study, we focused on how interactions between the insect immune response and plant secondary metabolites affect the response to a viral pathogen. Based upon prior research, we asked whether the buckeye caterpillar, Junonia coenia (Nymphalidae), which specializes on plants containing iridoid glycosides (IGs), is less able to resist the pathogenic effects of a densovirus infection when feeding on plants with high concentrations of IGs. In a fully factorial design, individuals were randomly assigned to three treatments, each of which had two levels: (1) exposed to the densovirus versus control, (2) placed on a plant species with high concentrations of IGs (Plantago lanceolata, Plantaginaceae) versus low concentrations of IGs (P. major), and (3) control versus surface sterilized to exclude surface microbes that may contribute to viral resistance. We measured phenoloxidase (PO) activity, hemocyte counts, and gut bacterial diversity (16S ribosomal RNA) during the fourth larval instar, as well as development time, pupal weight, and survival to adult. Individuals infected with the virus were immune-suppressed (as measured by PO response and hemocyte count) and developed significantly faster than virus-free individuals. Contrary to our predictions,mortality was significantly less for virus challengedindividuals reared on the high IG plant compared to the low IG plant.This suggests that plant secondary metabolites can influence survival from viral infection and may be associated with activation of PO. Removing egg microbes did not affect the immune response or survival of the larvae. In summary, these results suggest that plant secondary metabolites are important for survival against a viral pathogen. Even though the PO response was better on the high IG plant, the extent to which this result contributes to survival against the virus needs further investigation.
了解宿主植物化学、免疫反应和昆虫病原体之间的相互作用可以揭示昆虫食草动物对宿主植物的利用方式。在这项研究中,我们专注于昆虫免疫反应和植物次生代谢物之间的相互作用如何影响对病毒病原体的反应。基于先前的研究,我们询问了是否美洲蝶幼虫(Junonia coenia,Nymphalidae),专门以含有裂环烯醚萜糖苷(IGs)的植物为食,当以高浓度 IGs 的植物为食时,其对 densovirus 感染的致病性影响的抵抗力降低。在完全因子设计中,个体被随机分配到三个处理组,每个处理组有两个水平:(1)暴露于 densovirus 与对照,(2)置于高浓度 IGs 的植物物种(车前草,车前科)与低浓度 IGs(P. major),以及(3)对照与表面消毒以排除可能有助于抗病毒的表面微生物。我们在第四龄幼虫期间测量酚氧化酶(PO)活性、血细胞计数和肠道细菌多样性(16S 核糖体 RNA),以及发育时间、蛹重和成虫存活。感染病毒的个体(如 PO 反应和血细胞计数所示)被免疫抑制,并且比未感染病毒的个体发育得更快。与我们的预测相反,与在低 IG 植物上饲养的病毒挑战个体相比,在高 IG 植物上饲养的病毒挑战个体的死亡率显著降低。这表明植物次生代谢物可以影响病毒感染的存活,并且可能与 PO 的激活有关。去除卵微生物不会影响幼虫的免疫反应或存活。总之,这些结果表明植物次生代谢物对于抵抗病毒病原体的存活至关重要。尽管在高 IG 植物上 PO 反应更好,但这一结果对抵抗病毒的生存程度需要进一步研究。