Abstract
Host innate immunity is one of the factors that determines the resistance of insects to their entomopathogens. In the research reported here we studied whether or not phenoloxidase (PO), a key enzyme in the melanogenesis component of humoral immunity of insects, plays a role in the protection of Lymantria dispar larvae from infection by L. dispar multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus. We studied two types of viral infection: overt and covert. The following lines of investigation were tested: i) the intravital individual estimation of baseline PO activity in haemolymph plasma followed by virus challenging; ii) the specific inhibition of PO activity in vivo by peroral treatment of infected larvae with phenylthiourea (PTU), a competitive inhibitor of PO; iii) the evaluation of PO activity in the haemolymph plasma after larval starvation. Starvation is a stress that activates the covert infection to an overt form. All of these experiments did not show a relationship between PO activity in haemolymph plasma of L. dispar larvae and larval susceptibility to baculovirus. Moreover, starvation-induced activation of covert viral infection to an overt form occurred in 70 percent of virus-carrying larvae against the background of a dramatic increase of PO activity in haemolymph plasma in the insects studied. Our conclusion is that in L. dispar larvae PO activity is not a predictor of host resistance to baculovirus.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 0183940 |
Pages (from-to) | e0183940 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | PLoS ONE |
Volume | 12 |
Issue number | 8 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 30 Aug 2017 |
Keywords
- Animals
- Hemolymph/enzymology
- Host-Pathogen Interactions
- Monophenol Monooxygenase/metabolism
- Moths/enzymology
- Nucleopolyhedrovirus/physiology
- MANDUCA-SEXTA
- ARMIGERES SUBALBATUS
- CYTOTOXIC MOLECULES
- INSECT VIRUS
- GYPSY-MOTH
- LIFE-HISTORY
- NUCLEAR-POLYHEDROSIS-VIRUS
- VERTICAL TRANSMISSION
- IMMUNE FUNCTION
- DISEASE RESISTANCE