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Under the radar: Transcriptomic responses of bed bugs to an entomopathogen, environmental bacteria, and a human pathogen.

Authors :
Walt, Hunter K.
Bronzato-Badial, Aline
Maedo, Sophie E.
Hinton, Joseph A.
King, Jonas G.
Pietri, Jose E.
Hoffmann, Federico G.
Source :
Journal of Invertebrate Pathology. Sep2024, Vol. 206, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

[Display omitted] • Studying bed bug immunity can help us understand why they are not pathogen vectors. • Bed bug immune effector genes are upregulated in response to an insect pathogen. • Bed bug immune effector genes are upregulated in response to environmental bacteria. • Immune effector genes are not upregulated when bed bugs are fed Borrelia duttoni. • This human pathogen may not be detected by the bed bug molecular immune system. Bed bugs (Hemiptera: Cimicidae) are widely distributed, obligately blood-feeding insects, but they have never been linked to pathogen transmission in humans. Most other hematophagous insects that frequently bite humans transmit pathogens, and it is unclear why bed bugs do not. One hypothesis is that bed bugs have evolved a highly robust immune system because their mating system, traumatic insemination, exposes females to consistent wounding and bacterial infections. Although this has been proposed, very little is known about the bed bug immune system and how bed bugs respond to microbial challenges introduced by wounding. Similarly, there is little known about how the bed bug immune system responds to human pathogens. Understanding the bed bug immune system could give insight to why bed bugs appear not to transmit disease and under what circumstances they could, while also facilitating biological control efforts involving microbes. To investigate the transcriptomic response of bed bugs to immune challenges, we exposed female bed bugs to three bacterial challenges. 1.) Pseudomonas fluorescens , an entomopathogen known to have harmful effects to bed bugs, 2.) bacteria cultured from a bed bug enclosure (99.9 % Bacillus spp.), likely encountered during traumatic insemination, and 3.) Borrelia duttoni , a human vector-borne pathogen that causes relapsing fever. We compared the transcriptomes of infected bed bugs with uninfected matched controls in a pairwise fashion, focusing on immune-related genes. We found many known antimicrobial effector genes upregulated in response to P. fluorescens and traumatic insemination-associated bacteria, but interestingly, not in response to B. duttoni. In the differentially expressed genes that were shared between experiments, we found significant overlap in the P. fluorescens treatment and the traumatic insemination bacteria treatment, and between the P. fluorescens and B. duttoni treatments, but not between the traumatic insemination bacteria treatment and the B. duttoni treatment. Finally, we identify previously overlooked candidates for future studies of immune function in bed bugs, including a peroxidase-like gene, many putative cuticle-associated genes, a laccase-like gene, and a mucin-like gene. By taking a comprehensive transcriptomic approach, our study is an important step in understanding how bed bugs respond to diverse immune challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00222011
Volume :
206
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Invertebrate Pathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179503431
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jip.2024.108182