Affiliation:
1. Department of Entomology and Center for Emerging and Tropical Diseases, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Polydnaviridae
is a unique family of DNA viruses that are symbiotically associated with parasitoid wasps. Upon oviposition, wasps inject these viruses into their hosts, where they cause several physiological alterations, including suppression of the cellular immune response. Here we report that expression of the
glc1.8
gene from
Microplitis demolitor
bracovirus (MdBV) causes a loss of adhesion by two hemocyte-like cell lines, namely, High Five cells from the lepidopteran
Trichoplusia ni
and S2 cells from the dipteran
Drosophila melanogaster
. The expression of recombinant Glc1.8 also greatly reduced the ability of these cells to phagocytize foreign targets. Glc1.8 is characterized by a signal peptide at its N terminus, an extracellular domain comprised of five nearly perfect tandem repeats of 78 amino acids, and a C-terminal hydrophobic domain that encodes a putative membrane anchor sequence. The expression of a Glc1.8 mutant lacking the anchor sequence resulted in a secreted protein that had no effect on adhesion or phagocytosis. In contrast, sequential deletion of the repeats in the extracellular domain resulted in a progressive reduction in immunosuppressive activity. Since each repeat and its associated glycosylation sites are nearly identical, these results suggested that adhesion-blocking activity depends more on the overall number of repeats in the extracellular domain than on the specific determinants within each repeat. While it severely compromised adhesion and phagocytic functions, Glc1.8 did not cause cell death. Collectively, these results indicate that Glc1.8 is a major pathogenic determinant of MdBV that is involved in suppression of the insect cellular immune response.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
79 articles.
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