Publication | Closed Access
Antimicrobial Peptides Keep Insect Endosymbionts Under Control
358
Citations
23
References
2011
Year
Host ResponseRna InterferenceVirulence FactorPathogenesisImmunologyInnate Immune SystemPeptide TherapeuticPathogen EffectorCola GeneMicrobiologyHost-microbe InteractionMedicineAntimicrobial ResistanceTransmitted Endosymbionts
Vertically transmitted endosymbionts persist for millions of years in invertebrates and play an important role in animal evolution. However, the functional basis underlying the maintenance of these long-term resident bacteria is unknown. We report that the weevil coleoptericin-A (ColA) antimicrobial peptide selectively targets endosymbionts within the bacteriocytes and regulates their growth through the inhibition of cell division. Silencing the colA gene with RNA interference resulted in a decrease in size of the giant filamentous endosymbionts, which escaped from the bacteriocytes and spread into insect tissues. Although this family of peptides is commonly linked with microbe clearance, this work shows that endosymbiosis benefits from ColA, suggesting that long-term host-symbiont coevolution might have shaped immune effectors for symbiont maintenance.
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