Distinct Bomanins at the Drosophila 55C locus function in resistance and resilience to infections

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Distinct Bomanins at the Drosophila 55C locus function in resistance and resilience to infections

Authors

Lou, Y.; Zhang, B.; Zhang, Z.; Pan, Y.; Yang, J.; Li, L.; Huang, J.; Yuan, Z.; Liegeois, S.; Bulet, P.; Xu, R.; Li, Z.; FERRANDON, D.

Abstract

Host defense against many Gram-positive bacteria and fungal pathogens is mainly provided by the Toll-dependent systemic immune response in Drosophila. While antimicrobial peptides active against these categories of pathogens contribute only modestly to protection, Bomanin peptides are major effectors of the Toll pathway. Remarkably, flies deleted for the 55C locus that contains 10 Bomanin genes are as sensitive as Toll pathway mutant flies to these infections. Yet, the exact functions of single Bomanins in resistance or resilience to infections remain poorly characterized. Here, we have extensively studied the role of these Bomanin genes. BomT1 functions in resistance to Enterococcus faecalis while playing a role in resilience against Metarhizium robertsii infection, like BomS2. BomT1 and BomT2 prevent the dissemination of Candida albicans throughout the host, even though they are not sufficient to confer protection to immunodeficient flies against this pathogen in survival experiments. Furthermore, BomT1 and BomBc1 mutants are sensitive to an Aspergillus fumigatus ribotoxin. We conclude that 55C Bomanins have defined albeit sometimes overlapping roles in the different facets of host defense against infections.

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