Duox and Jak/Stat signalling influence disease tolerance in Drosophila during Pseudomonas entomophila infection. Prakash, A., Monteith, K. M., Bonnet, M., & Vale, P. F. Developmental & Comparative Immunology, June, 2023.
Duox and Jak/Stat signalling influence disease tolerance in Drosophila during Pseudomonas entomophila infection [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   11 downloads  
Disease tolerance describes an infected host's ability to maintain health independently of the ability to clear microbe loads. The Jak/Stat pathway plays a pivotal role in humoral innate immunity by detecting tissue damage and triggering cellular renewal, making it a candidate tolerance mechanism. Here, we find that in Drosophila melanogaster infected with Pseudomonas entomophila disrupting ROS-producing dual oxidase (duox) or the negative regulator of Jak/Stat Socs36E, render male flies less tolerant. Another negative regulator of Jak/Stat, G9a - which has previously been associated with variable tolerance of viral infections – did not affect the rate of mortality with increasing microbe loads compared to flies with functional G9a, suggesting it does not affect tolerance of bacterial infection as in viral infection. Our findings highlight that ROS production and Jak/Stat signalling influence the ability of flies to tolerate bacterial infection sex-specifically and may therefore contribute to sexually dimorphic infection outcomes in Drosophila.
@article{prakash_duox_2023,
	title = {Duox and {Jak}/{Stat} signalling influence disease tolerance in {Drosophila} during {Pseudomonas} entomophila infection},
	copyright = {All rights reserved},
	issn = {0145-305X},
	url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0145305X2300126X},
	doi = {10.1016/j.dci.2023.104756},
	abstract = {Disease tolerance describes an infected host's ability to maintain health independently of the ability to clear microbe loads. The Jak/Stat pathway plays a pivotal role in humoral innate immunity by detecting tissue damage and triggering cellular renewal, making it a candidate tolerance mechanism. Here, we find that in Drosophila melanogaster infected with Pseudomonas entomophila disrupting ROS-producing dual oxidase (duox) or the negative regulator of Jak/Stat Socs36E, render male flies less tolerant. Another negative regulator of Jak/Stat, G9a - which has previously been associated with variable tolerance of viral infections – did not affect the rate of mortality with increasing microbe loads compared to flies with functional G9a, suggesting it does not affect tolerance of bacterial infection as in viral infection. Our findings highlight that ROS production and Jak/Stat signalling influence the ability of flies to tolerate bacterial infection sex-specifically and may therefore contribute to sexually dimorphic infection outcomes in Drosophila.},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2023-06-12},
	journal = {Developmental \& Comparative Immunology},
	author = {Prakash, Arun and Monteith, Katy M. and Bonnet, Mickael and Vale, Pedro F.},
	month = jun,
	year = {2023},
	pages = {104756},
}

Downloads: 11