Abstract

Gender differences in the immune response of insects are driven by natural selection for females and sexual selection for males. These natural forces entail a multitude of extrinsic and intrinsic factors involved in a genotype-environment interaction that results in sex-biased expression of the genes shared by males and females. However, little is known about how an infection at a particular ontogenetic stage may influence later stages, or how it may impact sexual immune dimorphism. Using Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, the aim of the present study was to analyze the effect of a bacterial exposure at the larval stage on adult immunity in males and females. The parameters measured were phenoloxidase activity, nitric oxide production, antimicrobial activity, and the antimicrobial peptide transcript response. As a measure of the immune response success, the persistence of injected bacteria was also evaluated. The results show that males, as well as females, were able to enhance survival in the adult stage as a result of being exposed at the larval stage, which indicates a priming effect. Moreover, there was a differential gender immune response, evidenced by higher PO activity in males as well as higher NO production and greater antimicrobial activity in females. The greater bacterial persistence in females suggests a gender-specific strategy for protection after a previous experience with an elicitor. Hence, this study provides a primary characterization of the complex and gender-specific immune response of male and female adults against a bacterial challenge in mosquitoes primed at an early ontogenetic stage.

Highlights

  • Males and females share the genes that control general aspects of physiology, these show sex-biased expression during development

  • The survival analyses revealed that compared to unprimed mosquitoes, exposure of fourth larva instar with E. coli provided protection to adult males (Log-Rank x2 = 48.018, df = 2, P < 0.0001) and females (Log-Rank x2 = 7.9046, df = 2, P = 0.0192) when they were re-exposure with the same bacteria

  • No differences were observed in the value of PO between the unprimed group (UnPr) and primed group (Pr) groups, either before or after the adult challenge (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Males and females share the genes that control general aspects of physiology, these show sex-biased expression during development. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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