Young but not defenceless: antifungal activity during embryonic development of a social insect

Author:

Cole Erin L.1ORCID,Bayne Haley1ORCID,Rosengaus Rebeca B.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Marine and Environmental Sciences, Northeastern University, 134 Mugar Building, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA

Abstract

Termites live in environments heavily colonized by diverse microorganisms, including pathogens. Eggs laid within the nest are likely to experience similar pathogenic pressures as those experienced by older nest-mates. Consequently, eggs may be under selective pressures to be immune-competent. Through in vitro experiments using developing embryos of the dampwood termite, Zootermopsis angusticollis , we tested the ontogeny, location and strength of their antifungal activity against the fungus, Metarhizium brunneum . Exterior washes of the chorion (extra-chorionic) and components within the chorion (intra-chorionic) were incubated with fungal conidia, which were then scored for viability. The fungistatic activity was location and developmental stage dependent. Extra-chorionic washes had relatively weak antifungal activity. Intra-chorionic homogenates were highly antifungal, exhibiting increased potency through development. The positive correlation between intra-chorionic fungistasis and developmental stage is probably due to the expression of endogenous proteins during embryogenesis. Boiling of both the extra-chorionic washes and the intra-chorionic contents rescued conidia viability, indicating the antifungal agent(s) is (are) heat-sensitive and probably proteinaceous. This study is the first to address embryonic antifungal activity in a hemimetabolous, eusocial taxon. Our results support the hypothesis that microbes have been significant agents of selection in termites, fostering the evolution of antifungal properties even in the most immature stage of development.

Funder

Northeastern University Marine Science Center Undergraduate Summer Research Internship

Northeastern University Honors Early Research Award

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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