Laboratory of Virology, Wageningen University and Research, Droevendaalsesteeg 1, 6708 PB, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Laboratory of Virology, Wageningen University and Research, Droevendaalsesteeg 1, 6708 PB, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Curr Opin Insect Sci. 2019 Jun;33:30-36. doi: 10.1016/j.cois.2019.02.008. Epub 2019 Feb 28.
Baculoviruses are well-known for altering the behaviour of their caterpillar hosts by inducing hyperactivity (enhanced locomotion) and/or tree-top disease (climbing to elevated positions before death). These features, along with the genomic small size of baculoviruses compared to non-viral parasites and the at hand techniques for producing mutants, imply that baculoviruses are excellent tools for unravelling the molecular mechanisms underlying parasitic alteration of host behaviour. Baculoviruses can be easily mutated, allowing an optimal experimental setup in comparative studies, where for instance host gene expression can be compared between insects infected with wild-type viruses or with mutant viruses lacking genes involved in behavioural manipulation. Recent studies have revealed the first insight into the underlying molecular pathways that lead to the typical behaviour of baculovirus-infected caterpillars and into the role of light therein. Since host behaviour in general is mediated through the host's central nervous system (CNS), a promising future step will be to study how baculoviruses regulate the neuronal activity of the host.
杆状病毒通过诱导过度活跃(增强运动)和/或树梢病(在死亡前爬到高处)来改变其毛毛虫宿主的行为,这是众所周知的。与非病毒寄生虫相比,杆状病毒的基因组小,并且手头有产生突变体的技术,这些特征意味着杆状病毒是揭示寄生改变宿主行为的分子机制的极好工具。杆状病毒很容易发生突变,允许在比较研究中进行最佳的实验设置,例如可以在感染野生型病毒或缺乏参与行为操纵的基因的突变病毒的昆虫之间比较宿主基因表达。最近的研究揭示了第一个深入了解导致杆状病毒感染的毛毛虫典型行为的潜在分子途径,以及其中光的作用。由于一般来说,宿主行为是通过宿主的中枢神经系统(CNS)介导的,因此未来一个有前途的步骤将是研究杆状病毒如何调节宿主的神经元活动。