Baculoviruses manipulate host lipid metabolism via adipokinetic hormone signaling to induce climbing behavior.

IF 4.9 1区 医学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY PLoS Pathogens Pub Date : 2025-01-31 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.ppat.1012932
Lin Zhu, Yuqing Xie, Chenxi Liu, Jie Cheng, Zhongjian Shen, Xiaoming Liu, Limei Cai, Xinyuan Ning, Songdou Zhang, Zhen Li, Qiuying Huang, Xiaoxia Liu
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Abstract

Baculoviruses can induce climbing behavior in caterpillar hosts, which provides an excellent model for studying parasite manipulation of host behavior. Herein, we found that Helicoverpa armigera single nucleopolyhedrovirus (HearNPV) promoted lipid metabolism of infected H. armigera larvae, and changes in lipid metabolism can affect climbing behavior. Therefore, understanding the molecular mechanisms between lipid metabolism and climbing behavior is particularly important. In this study, we found adipokinetic hormone 1 (HaAKH1), adipokinetic hormone 2 (HaAKH2) and their receptor HaAKHR were essential for promoting lipid metabolism and climbing behavior in response to HearNPV infection. Both molecular docking result and Ca2+ imaging showed that both HaAKH1 and HaAKH2 could interact with HaAKHR. Knockdown of HaAKH1, HaAKH2 and HaAKHR resulted in not only the accumulation of triacylglycerol (TAG), but also the reduction of the replication of HearNPV and the crawling ability of infected H. armigera larvae, resulting in a decrease in the final death height of the infected larvae. We further validated this conclusion by injecting active peptides of HaAKH1 and HaAKH2 to infected larvae. In addition, we investigated the downstream of HaAKH signaling and found that hormone-sensitive lipase (HaHSL) changed with changes in HaAKH signaling and HaHSL played the same role as HaAKH signaling. These findings not only revealed the mechanism by which parasites manipulated host lipid metabolism, but more significantly, explored the relationship between lipid metabolism and behavioral changes of hosts manipulated by parasites, broadening our understanding of the phenomenon of parasites manipulating host behavioral changes.

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杆状病毒通过脂肪动力学激素信号控制宿主脂质代谢,诱导攀爬行为。
杆状病毒可以诱导毛虫宿主的攀爬行为,这为研究寄生虫操纵宿主行为提供了一个很好的模型。本研究发现,棉铃虫单核多角体病毒(Helicoverpa armigera single nucleopolyhedrovirus, HearNPV)促进了棉铃虫幼虫的脂质代谢,脂质代谢的变化影响了棉铃虫的攀爬行为。因此,了解脂质代谢和攀爬行为之间的分子机制尤为重要。在本研究中,我们发现脂肪动力学激素1 (HaAKH1)、脂肪动力学激素2 (HaAKH2)及其受体HaAKHR在促进脂质代谢和攀爬行为中发挥了重要作用。分子对接结果和Ca2+成像均显示HaAKH1和HaAKH2均能与HaAKHR相互作用。HaAKH1、HaAKH2和HaAKHR基因的敲低不仅导致三酰甘油(triacylglycerol, TAG)的积累,还会降低被感染的棉蚜幼虫的HearNPV复制和爬行能力,导致被感染幼虫的最终死亡高度降低。我们通过向感染的幼虫注射HaAKH1和HaAKH2活性肽进一步验证了这一结论。此外,我们对HaAKH信号的下游进行了研究,发现激素敏感脂肪酶(HaHSL)随着HaAKH信号的变化而变化,HaHSL与HaAKH信号的作用相同。这些发现不仅揭示了寄生虫操纵宿主脂质代谢的机制,更重要的是,探索了寄生虫操纵宿主脂质代谢与行为改变之间的关系,拓宽了我们对寄生虫操纵宿主行为改变现象的认识。
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来源期刊
PLoS Pathogens
PLoS Pathogens MICROBIOLOGY-PARASITOLOGY
自引率
3.00%
发文量
598
期刊介绍: Bacteria, fungi, parasites, prions and viruses cause a plethora of diseases that have important medical, agricultural, and economic consequences. Moreover, the study of microbes continues to provide novel insights into such fundamental processes as the molecular basis of cellular and organismal function.
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