Double peroxidase and histone acetyltransferase AgTip60 maintain innate immune memory in primed mosquitoes

双过氧化物酶和组蛋白乙酰转移酶 AgTip60 在受致敏蚊子体内维持先天免疫记忆

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作者:Fabio M Gomes, Miles D W Tyner, Ana Beatriz F Barletta, Banhisikha Saha, Lampouguin Yenkoidiok-Douti, Gaspar E Canepa, Alvaro Molina-Cruz, Carolina Barillas-Mury

Abstract

Immune priming in Anopheles gambiae is mediated by the systemic release of a hemocyte differentiation factor (HDF), a complex of lipoxin A4 bound to Evokin, a lipid carrier. HDF increases the proportion of circulating granulocytes and enhances mosquito cellular immunity. Here, we show that Evokin is present in hemocytes and fat-body cells, and messenger RNA (mRNA) expression increases significantly after immune priming. The double peroxidase (DBLOX) enzyme, present in insects but not in vertebrates, is essential for HDF synthesis. DBLOX is highly expressed in oenocytes in the fat-body tissue, and these cells increase in number in primed mosquitoes. We provide direct evidence that the histone acetyltransferase AgTip60 (AGAP001539) is also essential for a sustained increase in oenocyte numbers, HDF synthesis, and immune priming. We propose that oenocytes may function as a population of cells that are reprogrammed, and orchestrate and maintain a broad, systemic, and long-lasting state of enhanced immune surveillance in primed mosquitoes.

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