Sugar-rich larval diet promotes lower adult pathogen load and higher survival after infection in a polyphagous fly

Author:

Dinh Hue1ORCID,Lundbäck Ida1,Kumar Sheemal1ORCID,Than Anh The12ORCID,Morimoto Juliano134ORCID,Ponton Fleur1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University 1 , North Ryde, NSW 2109 , Australia

2. Vietnam National University of Agriculture 2 Department of Entomology , , Trau Quy, Gia Lam, Hanoi 100000 , Vietnam

3. School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen 3 , Zoology Building, Tillydrone Ave, Aberdeen AB24 2TZ , UK

4. Programa de Pós-graduação em Ecologia e Conservação, Universidade Federal do Paraná 4 , Curitiba 82590-300 , Brazil

Abstract

ABSTRACT Nutrition is a central factor influencing immunity and resistance to infection, but the extent to which nutrition during development affects adult responses to infections is poorly understood. Our study investigated how the nutritional composition of the larval diet affects the survival, pathogen load and food intake of adult fruit flies, Bactrocera tryoni, after septic bacterial infection. We found a sex-specific effect of larval diet composition on survival post-infection: survival rate was higher and bacterial load was lower for infected females raised on a sugar-rich larval diet than for females raised on a protein-rich larval diet, an effect that was absent in males. Both males and females were heavier when fed a balanced larval diet compared with a protein- or sugar-rich diet, while body lipid reserves were higher for those that had consumed the sugar-rich larval diet compared with other diets. Body protein reserves were lower for flies that had been raised on the sugar-rich larval diet compared with other diets in males, but not females. Both females and males shifted their nutrient intake to ingest a sugar-rich diet when infected compared with sham-infected flies without any effect of the larval diet, suggesting that sugar-rich diets can be beneficial to fight off bacterial infection as shown in previous literature. Overall, our findings show that nutrition during early life can shape individual fitness in adulthood.

Funder

Hort Innovation

Macquarie University

Australian Government

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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