Time- and tissue-specific antimicrobial activity of the common bed bug in response to blood feeding and immune activation by bacterial injection


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Authors: Meraj, S; Mohr, E; Ketabchi, N; Bogdanovic, A; Lowenberger, C; Gries, G
Year: 2021
Journal: J. Insect Physiol. 135   Article Link (DOI)  PubMed
Title: Time- and tissue-specific antimicrobial activity of the common bed bug in response to blood feeding and immune activation by bacterial injection
Abstract: Unlike almost all hematophagous insects, common bed bugs, Cimex lectularius, are not known to transmit pathogens to humans. To help unravel the reasons for their lack of vector competence, we studied the time-and tissue-dependent expression of innate immune factors after blood feeding or immune activation through the intrathoracic injection of bacteria. We used minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC1) bioassays and the Kirby Bauer protocol to evaluate antimicrobial peptide (AMP(2)) activity in tissue extracts from the midguts or 'rest of body' (RoB(3)) tissues (containing hemolymph and fat body AMPs) against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. We compared AMP activity between blood-fed female bed bugs and yellow fever mosquitoes, Aedes aegypti and determined how female and male bed bugs respond to immune challenges, and how long AMP gene expression remains elevated in bed bugs following a blood meal. Blood meal-induced AMP activity is 4-fold stronger in female bed bugs than in female mosquitoes. Male bed bugs have elevated AMP activity within 8 h of a blood meal or an intrathoracic injection with bacteria, with the strongest activity expressed in RoB tissue 24 h after the immune challenge. Female bed bugs have a stronger immune response than males within 24 h of a blood meal. The effects of blood meal-induced elevated AMP activity lasts longer against the Gram-positive bacterium, Bacillus subtilis, than against the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli. Unravelling the specific immune pathways that are activated in the bed bugs' immune responses and identifying the bed bug-unique AMPs might help determine why these insects are not vectors of human parasites.
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