The circadian clock protein timeless regulates phagocytosis of bacteria in Drosophila.

Survival of bacterial infection is the result of complex host-pathogen interactions. An often-overlooked aspect of these interactions is the circadian state of the host. Previously, we demonstrated that Drosophila mutants lacking the circadian regulatory proteins Timeless (Tim) and Period (Per) are...

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Main Authors: Elizabeth F Stone, Ben O Fulton, Janelle S Ayres, Linh N Pham, Junaid Ziauddin, Mimi M Shirasu-Hiza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3257305?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-4f9644efefcc459d8a40ec3a7b44b88c2020-11-24T21:55:32ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742012-01-0181e100244510.1371/journal.ppat.1002445The circadian clock protein timeless regulates phagocytosis of bacteria in Drosophila.Elizabeth F StoneBen O FultonJanelle S AyresLinh N PhamJunaid ZiauddinMimi M Shirasu-HizaSurvival of bacterial infection is the result of complex host-pathogen interactions. An often-overlooked aspect of these interactions is the circadian state of the host. Previously, we demonstrated that Drosophila mutants lacking the circadian regulatory proteins Timeless (Tim) and Period (Per) are sensitive to infection by S. pneumoniae. Sensitivity to infection can be mediated either by changes in resistance (control of microbial load) or tolerance (endurance of the pathogenic effects of infection). Here we show that Tim regulates resistance against both S. pneumoniae and S. marcescens. We set out to characterize and identify the underlying mechanism of resistance that is circadian-regulated. Using S. pneumoniae, we found that resistance oscillates daily in adult wild-type flies and that these oscillations are absent in Tim mutants. Drosophila have at least three main resistance mechanisms to kill high levels of bacteria in their hemolymph: melanization, antimicrobial peptides, and phagocytosis. We found that melanization is not circadian-regulated. We further found that basal levels of AMP gene expression exhibit time-of-day oscillations but that these are Tim-independent; moreover, infection-induced AMP gene expression is not circadian-regulated. We then show that phagocytosis is circadian-regulated. Wild-type flies exhibit up-regulated phagocytic activity at night; Tim mutants have normal phagocytic activity during the day but lack this night-time peak. Tim appears to regulate an upstream event in phagocytosis, such as bacterial recognition or activation of phagocytic hemocytes. Interestingly, inhibition of phagocytosis in wild type flies results in survival kinetics similar to Tim mutants after infection with S. pneumoniae. Taken together, these results suggest that loss of circadian oscillation of a specific immune function (phagocytosis) can have significant effects on long-term survival of infection.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3257305?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth F Stone
Ben O Fulton
Janelle S Ayres
Linh N Pham
Junaid Ziauddin
Mimi M Shirasu-Hiza
spellingShingle Elizabeth F Stone
Ben O Fulton
Janelle S Ayres
Linh N Pham
Junaid Ziauddin
Mimi M Shirasu-Hiza
The circadian clock protein timeless regulates phagocytosis of bacteria in Drosophila.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Elizabeth F Stone
Ben O Fulton
Janelle S Ayres
Linh N Pham
Junaid Ziauddin
Mimi M Shirasu-Hiza
author_sort Elizabeth F Stone
title The circadian clock protein timeless regulates phagocytosis of bacteria in Drosophila.
title_short The circadian clock protein timeless regulates phagocytosis of bacteria in Drosophila.
title_full The circadian clock protein timeless regulates phagocytosis of bacteria in Drosophila.
title_fullStr The circadian clock protein timeless regulates phagocytosis of bacteria in Drosophila.
title_full_unstemmed The circadian clock protein timeless regulates phagocytosis of bacteria in Drosophila.
title_sort circadian clock protein timeless regulates phagocytosis of bacteria in drosophila.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Survival of bacterial infection is the result of complex host-pathogen interactions. An often-overlooked aspect of these interactions is the circadian state of the host. Previously, we demonstrated that Drosophila mutants lacking the circadian regulatory proteins Timeless (Tim) and Period (Per) are sensitive to infection by S. pneumoniae. Sensitivity to infection can be mediated either by changes in resistance (control of microbial load) or tolerance (endurance of the pathogenic effects of infection). Here we show that Tim regulates resistance against both S. pneumoniae and S. marcescens. We set out to characterize and identify the underlying mechanism of resistance that is circadian-regulated. Using S. pneumoniae, we found that resistance oscillates daily in adult wild-type flies and that these oscillations are absent in Tim mutants. Drosophila have at least three main resistance mechanisms to kill high levels of bacteria in their hemolymph: melanization, antimicrobial peptides, and phagocytosis. We found that melanization is not circadian-regulated. We further found that basal levels of AMP gene expression exhibit time-of-day oscillations but that these are Tim-independent; moreover, infection-induced AMP gene expression is not circadian-regulated. We then show that phagocytosis is circadian-regulated. Wild-type flies exhibit up-regulated phagocytic activity at night; Tim mutants have normal phagocytic activity during the day but lack this night-time peak. Tim appears to regulate an upstream event in phagocytosis, such as bacterial recognition or activation of phagocytic hemocytes. Interestingly, inhibition of phagocytosis in wild type flies results in survival kinetics similar to Tim mutants after infection with S. pneumoniae. Taken together, these results suggest that loss of circadian oscillation of a specific immune function (phagocytosis) can have significant effects on long-term survival of infection.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3257305?pdf=render
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