Abstract

Black soldier fly (BSF, Hermetia illucens) is popular for its applications in animal feed, waste management and antimicrobial peptide source. The major advantages of BSF larva include their robust immune system and high nutritional content that can be further developed into more potential agricultural and medical applications. Several strategies are now being developed to exploit their fullest capabilities and one of these is the immunity modulation using bacterial challenges. The mechanism underlying metabolic responses of BSF to different bacteria has, however, remained unclear. In the current study, entometabolomics was employed to investigate the metabolic phenoconversion in response to either Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, or combined challenges in BSF larva. We have, thus far, characterised 37 metabolites in BSF larva challenged with different bacteria with the major biochemical groups consisting of amino acids, organic acids, and sugars. The distinct defense mechanism-specific metabolic phenotypes were clearly observed. The combined challenge contributed to the most significant metabolic phenoconversion in BSF larva with the dominant metabolic phenotypes induced by S. aureus. Our study suggested that the accumulation of energy-related metabolites provided by amino acid catabolism is the principal metabolic pathway regulating the defense mechanism. Therefore, combined challenge is strongly recommended for raising BSF immunity as it remarkably triggered amino acid metabolisms including arginine and proline metabolism and alanine, aspartate and glutamate metabolism along with purine metabolism and pyruvate metabolism that potentially result in the production of various nutritional and functional metabolites.

Highlights

  • Black soldier fly (BSF, Hermetia illucens) is popular for its applications in animal feed, waste management and antimicrobial peptide source

  • In the current study, entometabolomics has been applied to characterise the alteration of biochemical components in black soldier fly (BSF) larva and to investigate the metabolic phenotypes in response to different bacterial challenges that may result in various biomolecule pools for further agricultural and medical uses

  • The current methodology employing bacterial challenge in BSF lacks the molecular baseline information whether single or combined challenge is truly required for immunomodulation

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Summary

Introduction

Black soldier fly (BSF, Hermetia illucens) is popular for its applications in animal feed, waste management and antimicrobial peptide source. The major advantages of BSF larva include their robust immune system and high nutritional content that can be further developed into more potential agricultural and medical applications. Compared to common protein-rich feeds (soya bean meal, fish meal, etc.), BSF contains high levels of some essential amino acids such as lysine, methionine, and threonine and demonstrates a better amino acid p­ rofile[10] With this valuable content of nutrition, BSF is believed to bring several significant benefits for human consumption discussing on food safety concerns, functional properties, Scientific Reports | (2021) 11:23316. In the current study, entometabolomics has been applied to characterise the alteration of biochemical components in BSF larva and to investigate the metabolic phenotypes in response to different bacterial challenges that may result in various biomolecule pools for further agricultural and medical uses

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