Abstract
Drosophila larvae and pupae are at high risk of parasitoid infection in nature. To circumvent parasitic stress, fruit flies have developed various survival strategies, including cellular and behavioral defenses. We show that adult Drosophila females exposed to the parasitic wasps, Leptopilina boulardi, decrease their total egg-lay by deploying at least two strategies: Retention of fully developed follicles reduces the number of eggs laid, while induction of caspase-mediated apoptosis eliminates the vitellogenic follicles. These reproductive defense strategies require both visual and olfactory cues, but not the MB247-positive mushroom body neuronal function, suggesting a novel mode of sensory integration mediates reduced egg-laying in the presence of a parasitoid. We further show that neuropeptide F (NPF) signaling is necessary for both retaining matured follicles and activating apoptosis in vitellogenic follicles. Whereas previous studies have found that gut-derived NPF controls germ stem cell proliferation, we show that sensory-induced changes in germ cell development specifically require brain-derived NPF signaling, which recruits a subset of NPFR-expressing cell-types that control follicle development and retention. Importantly, we found that reduced egg-lay behavior is specific to parasitic wasps that infect the developing Drosophila larvae, but not the pupae. Our findings demonstrate that female fruit flies use multimodal sensory integration and neuroendocrine signaling via NPF to engage in parasite-specific cellular and behavioral survival strategies.
Highlights
Organisms have developed various survival strategies to circumvent the strong selection pressure imposed by environmental threats
We studied behavioral immunity in adult Drosophila females that protect their progeny from the parasitic infection
We show that Drosophila females modify their oviposition behavior in the presence of a parasitic wasp
Summary
Organisms have developed various survival strategies to circumvent the strong selection pressure imposed by environmental threats. Gypsy moth (Lymantris dispar) larvae detect and avoid virus-infected cadavers [2], pea aphids (Acyrthosiphon pisum) show bacterial endosymbiosis to protect from aphid-specific fungal pathogens [3], and woolly bear caterpillars self-medicate plant toxins—pyrrolizidine alkaloids as a defense against tachinid fly endoparasitoids [4]. Some of these behavioral adaptations that protect against potentially lethal threats are beneficial to an individual’s subsequent generations. Despite the significance and ubiquity in insects, the neuronal circuit(s) and molecular mechanisms that drive various forms of insect behavioral immunity remain poorly understood
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