4.8 Article

Activation of Toll Immune Pathway in an Insect Vector Induced by a Plant Virus

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.613957

Keywords

Toll pathway; rice stripe virus; small brown planthopper; immune perception; protein interaction

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32000121]
  2. Ningbo Science and Technology Innovation 2025 Major Project [2019B10004]
  3. Commonweal Project [202002N3004, 202002N3008]
  4. K. C. Wong Magna Fund in Ningbo University

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The Toll pathway in insect vectors is activated by plant virus infection, leading to upregulation of key genes and increased mortality in infected insects. The activation of Toll pathway is initiated by the direct interaction between Toll receptor and a protein encoded by the plant virus, indicating that it is an important defense mechanism against plant virus infection in insect vectors.
The Toll pathway plays an important role in defense against infection of various pathogenic microorganisms, including viruses. However, current understanding of Toll pathway was mainly restricted in mammal and some model insects such as Drosophila and mosquitoes. Whether plant viruses can also activate the Toll signaling pathway in vector insects is still unknown. In this study, using rice stripe virus (RSV) and its insect vector (small brown planthopper, Laodelphax striatellus) as a model, we found that the Toll pathway was activated upon RSV infection. In comparison of viruliferous and non-viruliferous planthoppers, we found that four Toll pathway core genes (Toll, Tube, MyD88, and Dorsal) were upregulated in viruliferous planthoppers. When the planthoppers infected with RSV, the expressions of Toll and MyD88 were rapidly upregulated at the early stage (1 and 3 days post-infection), whereas Dorsal was upregulated at the late stage (9 days post-infection). Furthermore, induction of Toll pathway was initiated by interaction between a Toll receptor and RSV nucleocapsid protein (NP). Knockdown of Toll increased the proliferation of RSV in vector insect, and the dsToll-treated insects exhibited higher mortality than that of dsGFP-treated ones. Our results provide the first evidence that the Toll signaling pathway of an insect vector is potentially activated through the direct interaction between Toll receptor and a protein encoded by a plant virus, indicating that Toll immune pathway is an important strategy against plant virus infection in an insect vector.

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