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Modulation of acyl-carnitines, the broad mechanism behind Wolbachia-mediated inhibition of medically important flaviviruses in Aedes aegypti

Authors :
Manokaran, G
Flores, HA
Dickson, CT
Narayana, VK
Kanojia, K
Dayalan, S
Tull, D
McConville, MJ
Mackenzie, JM
Simmons, CP
Manokaran, G
Flores, HA
Dickson, CT
Narayana, VK
Kanojia, K
Dayalan, S
Tull, D
McConville, MJ
Mackenzie, JM
Simmons, CP
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes are refractory to flavivirus infections, but the role of lipids in Wolbachia-mediated virus blocking remains to be elucidated. Here, we use liquid chromatography mass spectrometry to provide a comprehensive picture of the lipidome of Aedes aegypti (Aag2) cells infected with Wolbachia only, either dengue or Zika virus only, and Wolbachia-infected Aag2 cells superinfected with either dengue or Zika virus. This approach identifies a class of lipids, acyl-carnitines, as being down-regulated during Wolbachia infection. Furthermore, treatment with an acyl-carnitine inhibitor assigns a crucial role for acyl-carnitines in the replication of dengue and Zika viruses. In contrast, depletion of acyl-carnitines increases Wolbachia density while addition of commercially available acyl-carnitines impairs Wolbachia production. Finally, we show an increase in flavivirus infection of Wolbachia-infected cells with the addition of acyl-carnitines. This study uncovers a previously unknown role for acyl-carnitines in this tripartite interaction that suggests an important and broad mechanism that underpins Wolbachia-mediated pathogen blocking.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315696103
Document Type :
Electronic Resource