Symbiont-induced odorant binding proteins mediate insect host hematopoiesis

Tsetse Flies QH301-705.5 Science crystal cell Q R odorant binding protein hematopoiesis Hematopoiesis Up-Regulation 3. Good health symbiont Developmental Biology and Stem Cells Larva Medicine Animals Insect Proteins Drosophila tsetse fly Biology (General) Wigglesworthia
DOI: 10.7554/elife.19535 Publication Date: 2017-01-09T14:00:16Z
ABSTRACT
Symbiotic bacteria assist in maintaining homeostasis of the animal immune system. However, the molecular mechanisms that underlie symbiont-mediated host immunity are largely unknown. Tsetse flies (Glossina spp.) house maternally transmitted symbionts that regulate the development and function of their host’s immune system. Herein we demonstrate that the obligate mutualist, Wigglesworthia, up-regulates expression of odorant binding protein six in the gut of intrauterine tsetse larvae. This process is necessary and sufficient to induce systemic expression of the hematopoietic RUNX transcription factor lozenge and the subsequent production of crystal cells, which actuate the melanotic immune response in adult tsetse. Larval Drosophila’s indigenous microbiota, which is acquired from the environment, regulates an orthologous hematopoietic pathway in their host. These findings provide insight into the molecular mechanisms that underlie enteric symbiont-stimulated systemic immune system development, and indicate that these processes are evolutionarily conserved despite the divergent nature of host-symbiont interactions in these model systems.
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