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1.
Nodule formation is the quantitatively predominant insect cellular defense reaction to bacterial challenges, responsible for clearing the largest proportion of infecting bacteria from circulation. It has been suggested that eicosanoids mediate several steps in the nodulation process, including formation of hemocyte microaggregates, an early step in the process. While fat body and hemocytes are competent to biosynthesize eicosanoids, the source of the nodulation-mediating eicosanoids remains unclear. To investigate this issue, we studied hemocyte microaggregation reactions to bacterial challenge in vitro. Hemocyte suspensions from the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, were treated with the phospholipase A(2) inhibitor, dexamethasone, then challenged with the bacterium Serratia marcescens. Preparations treated with dexamethasone yielded fewer hemocyte microaggregations than untreated, control preparations. Furthermore, the influence of dexamethasone was reversed by amending experimental (dexamethasone-treated) preparations with the eicosanoid biosynthesis precursor, arachidonic acid. Palmitic acid, which is not a substrate for eicosanoid biosynthesis, did not reverse the influence of dexamethasone on the microaggregation reaction. The influence of dexamethasone was also reversed by adding filtered media from challenged hemocyte preparations to dexamethasone-treated preparations. Finally, most hemocyte preparations treated with selected eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibitors formed fewer hemocyte microaggregations than control preparations. The 5- and 12-lipoxygenase inhibitor, esculetin, did not influence the formation of hemocyte microaggregations in this system. These results are consistent with similar investigations performed in vivo, and we infer that hemocytes are responsible for forming and secreting eicosanoids, which subsequently initiate nodulation by mediating hemocyte microaggregation.  相似文献   

2.
Nodule formation is the predominant insect cellular defense reaction to bacterial challenges, responsible for clearing the largest proportion of infecting bacteria from hemolymph circulation. Hemocyte spreading behavior is a critical step in the nodulation process. It has been suggested that eicosanoids mediate several steps in the process. However, the influence of eicosanoids on hemocyte spreading has not been investigated in detail. To test the hypothesis that eicosanoids mediate hemocyte spreading behavior, I treated larvae of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, with eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibitors and later assessed plasmatocyte elongation on glass slides. Plasmatocytes from larvae treated with dexamethasone did not elongate to the extent of plasmatocytes from untreated control larvae. The dexamethasone effect on plasmatocyte elongation was expressed in a dose-dependent manner and was reversed by injecting dexamethasone-treated larvae with the eicosanoid-precursor fatty acid, arachidonic acid. Palmitic acid, which is not substrate for eicosanoid biosynthesis, did not reverse the influence of dexamethasone on plasmatocyte elongation. Finally, plasmatocytes from larvae treated with a range of eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibitors did not elongate to the extent of plasmatocytes from control larvae. Plasmatocyte width did not appear to be influenced in this study. These findings strongly support the idea that insect plasmatocyte elongation is influenced by eicosanoids.  相似文献   

3.
Nodulation is the first, and qualitatively predominant, cellular defense reaction to bacterial infections in insects. We tested the hypothesis that eicosanoids also mediate nodulation reactions to bacterial challenge in adults of a social insect, the honey bee, Apis mellifera. Treating newly-emerged experimental bees with the eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibitor, dexamethasone, impaired nodulation reactions to bacterial infections, and the influence of dexamethasone was reversed by treating infected insects with arachidonic acid, an eicosanoid precursor. Several other eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibitors, including the cyclooxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin, and the dual cyclooxygenase/lipoxygenase inhibitor, phenidone, also impaired the ability of experimental honeybees to form nodules in reaction to bacterial challenge. The influence of phenidone on nodulation was expressed in a dose-dependent manner. However, in experiments with older honey bees foragers, similar bacterial challenge did not evoke nodulation reactions. We infer from our results that while eicosanoids mediate cellular immune responses to bacterial infections in newly emerged honey bees, and more broadly, in most insect species, nodulation reactions to bacterial challenge probably do not occur in all phases of insect life cycles.  相似文献   

4.
Nodulation is the quantitatively predominant insect cellular immune function activated in response to bacterial, fungal and some viral infections. We posed the hypothesis that parasitoid insects express melanotic nodulation reactions to viral challenge and that eicosanoids mediate these reactions. Treating fifth-instar larvae of the ichneumonid endoparasitoid Pimpla turionellae with Bovine Herpes Simplex Virus-1 (BHSV-1) induced nodulation reactions in a challenge dose-dependent manner. Experimental larvae treated with the cyclooxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin, the lipoxygenase inhibitor, esculetin, and the phospholipase A2 inhibitor, dexamethasone, resulted in severely impaired nodulation reactions to our standard BHSV-1 challenge dose. The immunoinhibitory influence of dexamethasone was reversed in larvae reared on culture medium amended with arachidonic acid, the fatty acid precursor of eicosanoid biosynthesis. Larvae that had been reared on media amended with indomethacin, esculetin, or dexamethasone were also compromised in their nodulation reactions to viral challenge. The influence of the orally administered pharmaceutical was expressed in a dose-dependent manner. Finally, wasp larvae reared in the presence of indomethacin and dexamethasone expressed significantly decreased levels of phenoloxidase activity in response to viral challenge. These findings draw attention to the idea that endoparasitoid insects express cellular immune reactions to viral challenge; they also support our hypothesis that eicosanoids mediate nodulation reactions to viral challenge in these highly specialized insects.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Nodulation is the first, and quantitatively predominant, cellular defense reaction to bacterial infection in insects and other invertebrates. Inhibition of eicosanoid biosynthesis in true armyworms, Pseudaletia unipuncta, and black cutworms, Agrotis ipsilon, immediately prior to intrahemocoelic injections with heat-killed preparations of the bacterium, Serratia marcescens, severely impaired the nodulation response. Five eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibitors, including dexamethasone (a phospholipase A(2) inhibitor), indomethacin, ibuprofen (cyclooxygenase inhibitors), phenidone (dual lipoxygenase/cyclooxygenase inhibitor) and eicosatetraynoic acid (an arachidonic acid analog that inhibits all arachidonic acid metabolism) severely reduced nodulation in infected insects. The dexamethasone effects were reversed by treating true armyworms with arachidonic acid immediately after infection. In addition to these pharmacological findings, we demonstrate that an eicosanoid biosynthesis system is present in these insects. Arachidonic acid is present in fat body phospholipids at about 0.4% of total phospholipid fatty acids. Fat body expressed a phospholipase A(2) that can hydrolyze arachidonic acid from the sn-2 position of cellular phospholipids. Fat body preparations were competent to biosynthesize prostaglandins, of which PGE(2) was the major product. These findings support the hypothesis that eicosanoids mediate cellular immune reactions in insects.  相似文献   

7.
Nodulation is the temporally and quantitatively most important cellular defense response to bacterial, fungal and some viral infections in insects. We tested the hypothesis that prostaglandins and other eicosanoids are responsible for mediating nodulation reactions to bacterial infection in larvae of the blowfly Chrysomya megacephala. Third-instar larvae treated with Ureaplasma urealyticum formed nodules in a challenge dose-dependent manner. Nodulation was evoked shortly after injection and reached a maximum of approximately 25 nodules/larva within 8 h. Larvae treated with the glucocorticoid, dexamethasone and the cyclooxygenase inhibitors, indomethacin and piroxicam were impaired in their ability to form nodules following U. urealyticum infection. The number of nodules decreased with increasing doses of piroxicam. Contrarily, treating larvae with the lipooxygenase inhibitor, esculetin, and the dual cyclooxygenase/lipooxygenase inhibitor, phenidone did not influence nodulation reactions to infection. Supplying dexamethasone-treated larvae with the eicosanoid precursor, arachidonic acid, reversed the inhibitory effect of dexamethasone on nodulation. We infer from these results that eicosanoids mediate nodulation reactions to infection of a bacterial species that lacks cell walls in larvae of the blowfly, C. megacephala.  相似文献   

8.
Nodulation is the predominant cellular defense reaction to bacterial challenge in insects. Eicosanoids mediate several steps in the nodulation process, including formation of hemocyte microaggregations. Isolated hemocyte preparations synthesize and secrete eicosanoids, which mediate hemocytic immune reactions. Two major groups of eicosanoids are prostaglandins (products of cyclooxygenase pathways) and various products of lipoxygenase pathways. In this study, we test the hypothesis that prostaglandins, but not lipoxygenase products, mediate hemocyte microaggregation reactions in response to bacterial challenge. Our results indicate that isolated hemocyte preparations pretreated with the cyclooxygenase inhibitors indomethacin and naproxen yielded fewer microaggregates than untreated control groups (3.7 x 10(5) microaggregates/ml hemolymph vs. 11.0 x 10(5) microaggregates/ml hemolymph). These inhibitors influence hemocyte microaggregate formation in a dose-dependent manner in treatments ranging from 0 to 200 microM. The lipoxygenase inhibitors esculetin and caffeic acid did not impact the formation of microaggregates in this system. The influence of the phospholipase A(2) inhibitor dexamethasone was reversed by amending experimental (dexamethasone-treated) preparations with prostaglandin H(2), but not prostaglandin D(2), prostaglandin E(2), nor 5(S)-hydroperoxy-6E,8Z,11Z,14Z-eicosatetraenoic acid, a product of the lipoxygenase pathway. We infer that prostaglandins are the primary mediators of microaggregation reactions to bacterial challenge in insect hemocyte preparations.  相似文献   

9.
Many studies have documented the involvement of eicosanoids in insect cellular immune responses to bacteria. The use of the fungal pathogen Beauveria bassiana as a nodulation elicitor, with inhibition of phospholipase A(2) by dexamethasone, extends the principle to fungi. This study also provides the first evidence of involvement of the lipoxygenase (LOX) pathway rather than the cyclooxygenase (COX) pathway in synthesis of the nodulation mediating eicosanoid(s). The LOX product, 5(S)-hydroperoxyeicosa-6E,8Z,11Z,14Z-tetraenoic acid (5-HPETE), substantially reversed nodulation inhibition caused by dexamethasone and the LOX inhibitors, caffeic acid and esculetin. The COX product, prostaglandin H(2) (PGH(2)), did not reverse the nodulation inhibition by dexamethasone or the COX inhibitor, ibuprofen. None of the inhibitors tested had a significant effect on the phagocytosis of B. bassiana blastospores in vitro. Hemocyte phenoloxidase activity was reduced by dexamethasone, esculetin, and the COX inhibitor, indomethacin. The rescue candidates 5-HPETE and PGH(2) did not reverse the inhibition.  相似文献   

10.
Insect cellular immune reactions to bacterial infection include nodule formation. Eicosanoids mediate several cellular actions in the nodulation process, including formation of hemocyte microaggregates, an early step. In previous work, we reported that isolated hemocytes produce and secrete eicosanoids that influence hemocyte behavior in response to bacterial challenge. We also reported that microaggregate formation in response to challenge was mediated by prostaglandins (PGs), but not by products of the lipoxygenase (LOX) pathways. In this paper we describe experiments designed to test the idea that exposing isolated hemocytes to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) evokes formation of hemocyte microaggregates and this cellular action is mediated by PGs. Results show that isolated hemocyte preparations challenged with LPS formed more hemocyte microaggregates than unchallenged preparations (6.9x10(3) microaggregates/ml hemolymph vs. 2.5x10(3) microaggregates/ml hemolymph). LPS challenge stimulated formation of hemocyte microaggregates in a dose dependent manner. Experimental groups pretreated with cyclooxygenase inhibitors produced fewer hemocyte microaggregates in response to LPS challenge than untreated control groups. The formation of hemocyte microaggregates was not influenced by LOX inhibitors. Furthermore, the influence of dexamethasone was reversed by supplementing the experimental groups with the eicosanoid precursor fatty acid molecule, arachidonic acid and PGH(2). Palmitic acid, which is not substrate for eicosanoid biosynthesis, did not reverse the effects of dexamethasone on the formation of microaggregates. The LOX product 5(S)hydroperoxyeicosa-6E,8Z,11Z,14Z-tetraenoic acid also did not reverse the effects of dexamethasone. These results are consistent with similar investigations performed with bacterial suspensions. We infer that isolated hemocyte preparations recognize and react to LPS by forming microaggregates and this reaction is mediated by PGs, but not products of the LOX pathway.  相似文献   

11.
Hemocyte migration toward infection and wound sites is an essential component of insect defense reactions, although the biochemical signal mechanisms responsible for mediating migration in insect cells are not well understood. Here we report on the outcomes of experiments designed to test the hypotheses that (1) insect hemocytes are able to detect and migrate toward a source of N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP), the major chemotactic peptide from Escherichia coli and (2) that pharmaceutical modulation of eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibits hemocyte migration. We used primary hemocyte cultures prepared from fifth-instar tobacco hornworms, Manduca sexta in Boyden chambers to assess hemocyte migration toward buffer (negative control) and toward buffer amended with fMLP (positive control). Approximately 42% of negative control hemocytes migrated toward buffer and about 64% of positive control hemocytes migrated toward fMLP. Hemocyte migration was inhibited (by >40%) by treating hornworms with pharmaceutical modulators of cycloxygenase (COX), lipoxygenase and phospholipase A2 (PLA2) before preparing primary hemocyte cultures. The influence of the COX inhibitor, indomethacin, and the glucocorticoid, dexamethasone, which leads to inhibition of PLA2, was expressed in a dose-dependent way. The influence of dexamethasone was reversed by injecting arachidonic acid (precursor to eicosanoid biosynthesis) into hornworms before preparing primary hemocyte cultures. The saturated fatty acid, palmitic acid, did not reverse the inhibitor effect. These findings support both our hypotheses, first that insect hemocytes can detect and respond to fMLP, and second, that insect hemocyte migration is mediated by eicosanoids.  相似文献   

12.
The hemocytes phagocytosis in response to microorganisms may play an important role in the cellular immune responses of insects. Here, we have evaluated the effects of the platelet-activating factor (PAF) and eicosanoids in the phagocytosis of hemocyte monolayers of Rhodnius prolixus to the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Experiments showed that the phagocytosis of yeast cells by Rhodnius hemocytes is very efficient in both controls and cells treated with PAF and arachidonic acid. Phagocytosis of yeast particles is significantly blocked when the specific phopholipase A(2) inhibitor, dexamethasone, is applied on the hemocytes. By contrast, dexamethasone-pretreated hemocyte monolayers exhibit a drastic increase in the quantity of yeast cell-hemocyte internalization when the cells are treated by arachidonic acid. In addition, phagocytosis presents significant reduction in hemocyte monolayers treated with a specific PAF receptor antagonist, WEB 2086. Nevertheless, inhibition of phagocytosis with WEB 2086 is counteracted by the treatment of the hemocyte monolayers with PAF. In conclusion, phagocytosis of yeast cells by hemocytes is related to the activation of PAF receptors and eicosanoid pathways in the bloodsucking bug, R. prolixus.  相似文献   

13.
The activation of Dactylopius coccus (Costa) hemolymph with microbial polysaccharide molecules was studied. Hemolymph incubated in the presence of laminarin, zymosan, and N-acetyl glucosamine produced a dark fibrillar precipitated, and the red pigment (carminic acid) was consumed (measured spectrophotometrically at 495 nm). Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) did not induce any response. The reaction was inhibited with millimolar concentrations of serine and cysteine protease inhibitors, EGTA and phenyl thiourea. It was also diminished by prostaglandin synthesis inhibitors: dexamethasone, acetylsalicylic acid, and indomethacin. However, Mg2+ chelator EDTA did not inhibit hemolymph activation. Hemolymph proteins were depleted from soluble phase during treatment with laminarin, but a group of around 34 kDa remained unmodified. These results showed that D. coccus hemolymph is activated by microbial elicitors, its activation depends on eicosanoids, and suggest participation of a prophenoloxidase (PPO)-like activation system that could consume carminic acid. We are currently dissecting the molecular factors involved in D. coccus hemolymph activation to determine homologies and differences with other arthropods immune response pathways.  相似文献   

14.
Investigations on the effects of eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibitors on the hemocyte microaggregation and prophenoloxidase (proPO)-activating system in the hemolymph, parasitemia and mortality of Rhodnius prolixus infected with Trypanosoma rangeli were performed. Hemocoelic injection of live T. rangeli epimastigotes into fifth-instar larvae of R. prolixus that previously fed on blood containing an inhibitor of phospholipase A(2) (dexamethasone), a specific inhibitor of the cyclooxygenase pathway (indomethacin), and a non-selective lipoxygenase inhibitor (NDGA) (i) reduced the hemocyte microaggregation, (ii) attenuated the proPO system in the hemolymph and (iii) enhanced parasitemia and mortality induced by the parasite challenge in these insects. The effects obtained by dexamethasone administered orally were counteracted by inoculation of the insects with arachidonic acid. We suggest that the infectivity of T. rangeli can be increased by interference with the R. prolixus immune system. This is the first demonstration that the triatomine's immune responses to a parasite infection are modulated by a physiological system that includes eicosanoid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Insects have a highly developed innate immune system, including humoral and cellular components. The cellular immune responses refer to hemocyte-mediated processes such as phagocytosis, nodulation, and encapsulation. Nodulation is considered the predominant defense reaction to infection in insects. Treating third instar larvae of the grey flesh fly, Neobellieria bullata, with laminarin (beta-1,3-glucan, a typical component of fungal cell walls) induced nodulation in a dose-dependent manner. This reaction was initiated very soon after injection and reached its maximal response level after 4 h. The nodules were not randomly distributed in the hemocoel, but were concentrated around the crop. The possible role of eicosanoids in this nodulation process was determined by treating larvae with the phospholipase A(2) inhibitor, dexamethasone, the cyclooxygenase inhibitor, naproxen, and the lipoxygenase inhibitor, esculetin. Both dexamethasone and naproxen significantly impaired the ability of N. bullata larvae to form nodules in response to laminarin. Supplying dexamethasone-treated larvae with the eicosanoid precursor, arachidonic acid, restored the full response. On the other hand, treating larvae with esculetin did not influence the formation of nodules in response to laminarin. This is the first study that demonstrates the occurrence of a laminarin-induced nodulation response in Diptera. Phospholipase A(2) and cyclooxygenase activities, both involved in prostaglandin biosynthesis, appear to play an important role in the regulation of this process.  相似文献   

16.
We report on experiments designed to more thoroughly document the roles of eicosanoids as crucial elements in cell spreading and on experiments designed to test the hypothesis that in vivo bacterial infections influence cell spreading on glass surfaces. We used hemocytes prepared from tobacco hornworms, Manduca sexta (L.) (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) and four species of bacteria (Serratia marcescens, Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis, and Micrococcus luteus) in each experiment. Our protocols yielded several important points: (i) hemocytes prepared from hornworms at 15 and 60 min following infection with, separately, each of the four bacterial species were fundamentally altered in size (all less than the 15‐µm counting cut‐off) and none of the hemocytes exhibited cell‐spreading behavior; (ii) the influence of bacterial challenge on cell spreading declined with incubation time post‐challenge; (iii) conditioned medium (CM) prepared by exposing hemocytes to bacterial cells in vitro exerted a strong dose‐dependent influence on cell spreading. Specifically, plasmatocytes increased in length from about 38 µm with 2.5% CM to a maximum of about 54 µm at 100% CM; and (iv) the retarding influence of dexamethasone (an eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibitor) on cell spreading was reversed by arachidonic acid, prostaglandin H2, and CM. Taken together, these findings indicate that both bacterial infection and eicosanoids influence hemocyte‐spreading processes.  相似文献   

17.
Nodulation is the temporally and quantitatively most important cellular defense reaction to bacterial infections in insects. Inhibition of eicosanoid biosynthesis in adults of the cricket, Gryllus assimilis, immediately prior to intrahemocoelic injections of the bacterium, Serratia marcescens, sharply reduced the nodulation response. Separate treatments with specific inhibitors of phospholipase A(2), cyclooxygenase, and lipoxygenase reduced nodulation, supporting our view that nodule formation is a complex process involving lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase products. The inhibitory influence of dexamethasone was apparent within 2h of injection, and nodulation was significantly reduced, relative to control crickets, over 22h. The dexamethasone effects were reversed by treating bacteria-injected insects with the eicosanoid-precursor polyunsaturated fatty acid, arachidonic acid. Low levels of arachidonic acid were detected in fat body phospholipids, and fat body preparations were shown to be competent to biosynthesize eicosanoids from exogenous radioactive arachidonic acid. These findings in a hemimetabolous insect broaden our hypothesis that eicosanoids mediate cellular immune reactions to bacterial infections in most, if not all, insects.  相似文献   

18.
Bacterial challenge induced a significant increase in the total hemocyte population within 4 h in the beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua. Octopamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) are known to play critical roles in mediating insect immune responses. This study analyzed the effects of both biogenic monoamines on mediating up-regulation of circulating hemocyte population in response to bacterial challenge. Injection of either octopamine or 5-HT induced a significant increase in the total hemocyte count in the hemolymph without any bacterial challenge. On the other hand, the monoamine antagonists, phentolamine (an octopamine antagonist) and ketanserin (a 5-HT antagonist) each suppressed the increase of the circulating hemocyte counts in response to bacterial challenge. This rapid change of circulating hemocyte population did not appear to be the result of de novo hemocyte production from the hematopoietic organ because a physical block (“ligation”) of hemolymph circulation between thorax and abdomen did not inhibit the increase of hemocyte counts in the isolated abdomen in response to bacterial challenge. The effects of the two monoamines on hemocyte numbers were not dependent on the mediatory effects of eicosanoids, because dexamethasone, an eicosanoid biosynthesis inhibitor, had no effect on the hemocyte recruitment induced by the monoamines. On the other hand, an adenylate cyclase inhibitor, NKY80, significantly impaired hemocyte mobilization in response to bacterial challenge, implying involvement of cyclic AMP in the control of hemocyte numbers. Also, a Rac1 inhibitor, NSC23766, significantly antagonized the effects of monoamines in increasing circulating hemocyte numbers. Rac1 activity was necessary to form F-actins in the hemocytes of S. exigua, where its activity showed a quantitative correlation with hemocyte-spreading behavior. This study suggests that octopamine and 5-HT mediate a rapid increase of circulating hemocyte population in response to bacterial challenge via Rac1 signal in S. exigua.  相似文献   

19.
Eicosanoid actions in insect cellular immune functions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Insects are more or less constantly challenged with a daunting array of pathogenic organisms, including viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoans as well as various metazoan parasites and parasitoids. At the first level of defense, the pathogens are rebuffed by physical barriers, including the cuticle and peritrophic membrane. Upon breaching these barriers, pathogens meet with an arsenal of robust and efficacious immune defense mechanisms. Two general categories of defenses are typically recognized, humoral defenses and hemocytic or cellular defenses. The former involves induced synthesis of various antibacterial proteins and peptides, such as cecropins and lysozyme. Cellular defense mechanisms are characterized by direct interactions between circulating hemocytes and the invaders. These include phagocytosis, microaggregation, nodulation, and encapsulation. Microaggregation is a step in the nodulation process, which is responsible for clearing the bulk of bacterial infections from circulation. Coordinated cellular actions lead to encapsulation of invaders, such as parasitoid eggs, that are very much larger than individual hemocytes. While the defense mechanisms are broadly appreciated, less is known about the biochemical signals responsible for mediating and coordinating the cellular actions. We now know eicosanoids mediate phagocytosis, microaggregation, and nodulation reactions to immune challenge, as well as cell spreading, a specific step in nodulation. We have several goals in this mini review. We provide a brief background on cellular immunity, outline eicosanoid biosynthesis, and review eicosanoid actions in cellular immunity in insects. Recent work indicates some pathogens have usurped eicosanoid‐mediated immunity; they disable insect immunity by inhibiting eicosanoid biosynthesis. We interpret these findings and their significance with respect to the biological control of insects. We also present preliminary work designed to test hypotheses on how eicosanoids exert their actions. We address shortcomings in our knowledge on eicosanoids in insect biology.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract  Nodulation is the predominant cellular defense reaction to bacterial challenges in insects. In this study, third instar larvae of Chrysomya megacephala were injected with bacteria, Escherichia coli K 12 (106 CFU/mL, 2 μL), immediately prior to injection of inhibitors of eicosanoid biosynthesis, which sharply reduced nodulation response. Test larvae were treated with specific inhibitors of phospholipase A2 (dexamethasone), cyclo-oxygenase (indomethacin, ibuprofen and piroxicam), dual cyclo-oxygenase/lipoxygenase (phenidone) and lipoxygenase (esculetin) and these reduced nodulation except esculetin. The influence of bacteria was obvious within 2 h of injection (5 nodules/larva), and increased to a maximum after 8 h (with 15 nodules/larva), and then significantly reduced over 24 h (9 nodules/larva). The inhibitory influence of dexamethasone was apparent within 2 h of injection (4 vs. 5 nodules/larva), and nodulation was significantly reduced, compared to control, over 24 h (5 vs. 8 nodules/larva). Increased dosages of ibuprofen, indomethacin, piroxicam and phenidone led to decreased numbers of nodules. Nodules continued to exist during the pupal stage. However, the effects of dexamethasone were reversed by treating bacteria-injected insects with an eicosanoid-precursor polyunsaturated fatty acid, arachidonic acid. These findings approved our view that eicosanoid can mediate cellular defense mechanisms in response to bacterial infections in another Dipteran insect C. megacephala .  相似文献   

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