4.6 Article

Temporal transcriptome reveals that circadian clock is involved in the dynamic regulation of immune response to bacterial infection in Bombyx mori

Journal

INSECT SCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 31-46

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1744-7917.13043

Keywords

Bombyx mori; circadian clock; cry1 knockout; immune response

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This study investigates the dynamic regulation of the circadian clock on the immune response of silkworms to bacterial infection. The absence of the core clock gene cry1 in silkworms resulted in decreased resistance to Staphylococcus aureus and weakened immune response. The study also identified rhythmically expressed immune response genes and discovered the inhibitory effect of cry1 knockout on Toll, Imd, and NF-kappa B signaling pathways.
The circadian clock plays a critical role in the regulation of host immune defense. However, the mechanistic basis for this regulation is largely unknown. Herein, the core clock gene cryptochrome1 (cry1) knockout line in Bombyx mori, an invertebrate animal model, was constructed to obtain the silkworm with dysfunctional molecular clock, and the dynamic regulation of the circadian clock on the immune responsiveness within 24 h of Staphylococcus aureus infection was analyzed. We found that deletion of cry1 decreased viability of silkworms and significantly reduced resistance of larvae to S. aureus. Time series RNA-seq analysis identified thousands of rhythmically expressed genes, including immune response genes, in the larval immune tissue, fat bodies. Uninfected cry1 knockout silkworms exhibited expression patterns of rhythmically expressed genes similar to wild-type (WT) silkworms infected with S. aureus. However, cry1 knockout silkworms exhibited a seriously weakened response to S. aureus infection. The immune response peaked at 6 and 24 h after infection, during which transcription storms occurred, and the expression levels of the immune response genes, PGRP and antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), were significantly upregulated in WT. In contrast, cry1 knockout did not effectively activate Toll, Imd, or NF-kappa B signaling pathways during the immune adjustment period from 12 to 18 h after infection, resulting in failure to initiate the immune responsiveness peak at 24 h after infection. This may be related to inhibited silkworm fat body energy metabolism. These results demonstrated the dynamic regulation of circadian clock on silkworm immune response to bacterial infection and provided important insights into host antimicrobial defense mechanisms.

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