CNRS UMR 6282 Biogéosciences, Université de Bourgogne, Dijon, France.
Front Immunol. 2024 Feb 8;15:1354046. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1354046. eCollection 2024.
In invertebrates, immune priming is the ability of individuals to enhance their immune response based on prior immunological experiences. This adaptive-like immunity likely evolved due to the risk of repeated infections by parasites in the host's natural habitat. The expression of immune priming varies across host and pathogen species, as well as infection routes (oral or wounds), reflecting finely tuned evolutionary adjustments. Evidence from the mealworm beetle () suggests that Gram-positive bacterial pathogens play a significant role in immune priming after systemic infection. Despite the likelihood of oral infections by natural bacterial pathogens in , it remains debated whether ingestion of contaminated food leads to systemic infection, and whether oral immune priming is possible is currently unknown. We first attempted to induce immune priming in both larvae and adults by exposing them to food contaminated with living or dead Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial pathogens. We found that oral ingestion of living bacteria did not kill them, but septic wounds caused rapid mortality. Intriguingly, the consumption of either dead or living bacteria did not protect against reinfection, contrasting with injury-induced priming. We further examined the effects of infecting food with various living bacterial pathogens on variables such as food consumption, mass gain, and feces production in larvae. We found that larvae exposed to Gram-positive bacteria in their food ingested less food, gained less mass and/or produced more feces than larvae exposed to contaminated food with Gram-negative bacteria or control food. This suggests that oral contamination with Gram-positive bacteria induced both behavioral responses and peristalsis defense mechanisms, even though no immune priming was observed here. Considering that the oral route of infection neither caused the death of the insects nor induced priming, we propose that immune priming in may have primarily evolved as a response to the infection risk associated with wounds rather than oral ingestion.
在无脊椎动物中,免疫原性是指个体基于先前的免疫经验增强免疫反应的能力。这种类似适应性的免疫可能是由于宿主自然栖息地中寄生虫的重复感染风险而进化而来的。免疫原性的表达因宿主和病原体物种以及感染途径(口服或伤口)而异,反映了精细的进化调整。黄粉虫(Tenebrio molitor)的证据表明,革兰氏阳性细菌病原体在系统性感染后在免疫原性中起重要作用。尽管在黄粉虫中存在自然细菌病原体的口服感染的可能性,但仍存在争议的是,摄入受污染的食物是否会导致系统性感染,以及口服免疫原性是否可能目前尚不清楚。我们首先试图通过让幼虫和成虫接触污染有活的或死的革兰氏阳性和革兰氏阴性细菌病原体的食物来诱导免疫原性。我们发现,口服摄入活细菌不会杀死它们,但败血性伤口会导致快速死亡。有趣的是,消耗死菌或活菌都不能提供针对再感染的保护,这与损伤诱导的原性形成对比。我们进一步研究了用各种活细菌病原体感染食物对幼虫变量的影响,例如食物消耗、体重增加和粪便产生。我们发现,与接触革兰氏阴性细菌污染食物或对照食物的幼虫相比,接触食物中的革兰氏阳性细菌的幼虫摄入的食物较少,体重增加较少,或产生的粪便较多。这表明,即使在这里没有观察到免疫原性,革兰氏阳性细菌的口服污染也会诱导行为反应和蠕动防御机制。考虑到口服感染途径既不会导致昆虫死亡,也不会诱导原性,我们提出黄粉虫中的免疫原性可能主要是作为对与伤口相关的感染风险的反应而进化的,而不是由于口服摄入。