Abstract
AbstractAntimicrobial peptides act as a host defense mechanism and regulate the commensal microbiome. To obtain a comprehensive view of genes contributing to long-term memory we performed mRNA sequencing from single Drosophila heads following behavioral training that produces long-lasting memory. Surprisingly, we find that two immune peptides with antimicrobial activity, Diptericin B and Gram-Negative Bacteria Binding Protein like 3, regulate long-term but not short-term memory or instinctive behavior in Drosophila. The cellular requirement of these two peptides is distinct: head fat body for DptB, and neurons for GNBP-like3. That antimicrobial peptides influence memory provides a novel example of the emerging link between the immune and nervous systems and reveals that some immune peptides may have been repurposed in the nervous system.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
5 articles.
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