Abstract

There is growing evidence that insects living in high-density populations exhibit an increase in immune function to counter a higher risk of disease. This phenomenon, known as density-dependent prophylaxis, has been experimentally tested in a number of insect species. Although density-dependent prophylaxis is especially prevalent in insects exhibiting density-dependent phase polyphenism, the molecular mechanism remains unclear. Our previous study demonstrated that the antibacterial activity of lysozyme is important for this process in the beet webworm Loxostege sticticalis. In this study, a lysozyme cDNA from L. sticticalis was cloned and characterized. The full-length cDNA is 1078 bp long and contains an open reading frame of 426 bp that encodes 142 amino acids. The deduced protein possesses structural characteristics of a typical c-type lysozyme and clusters with c-type lysozymes from other Lepidoptera. LsLysozyme was found to be expressed throughout all developmental stages, showing the highest level in pupae. LsLysozyme was also highly expressed in the midgut and fat body. Elevated LsLysozyme expression was observed in L. sticticalis larvae infected by Beauveria bassiana and in larvae reared under crowding conditions. In addition, the expression level of LsLysozyme in infected larvae reared at a density of 10 larvae per jar was significantly higher compared to those reared at a density of l or 30 larvae per jar. These results suggest that larval crowding affects the gene expression profile of this lysozyme. This study provides additional insight into the expression of an immune-associated lysozyme gene and helps us to better understand the immune response of L. sticticalis under crowding conditions.

Highlights

  • The immune system is very important to host defense against pathogens and parasites

  • The c-type LsLysozyme cDNA amplified from L. sticticalis is 1096 bp long and contains an open reading frame (ORF) of 426 bp that encodes a protein of 141 amino acids

  • A c-type lysozyme cDNA was amplified from an important agricultural pest, the beet webworm L. sticticalis

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Summary

Introduction

The immune system is very important to host defense against pathogens and parasites. The humoral immune response is based on antimicrobial peptides such as attacin, lysozyme, defensin and aecropin [2]. Lysozyme was the first antimicrobial peptide to be purified and was reported to play a critical role in the host immune response [3]. Lysozyme enzymes are a type of hydrolase that digests bacterial cell walls by cleaving the beta1,4-glycosidic linkage between N-acetyl-D-glucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid and hydrolyzes the β-1,4-linkage of chitooligosaccharides in fungal cell walls [4, 5]. There are six major lysozymes types reported to date, including chicken (c-type), goose (g-type), inverterbrate-type (i-type), plant, phage and bacterial [6]

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