MAPK-dependent hormonal signaling plasticity contributes to overcoming Bacillus thuringiensis toxin action in an insect host

Zhaojiang Guo(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Shi Kang(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Dan Sun(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Lijun Gong(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Junlei Zhou(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Jianying Qin(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Le Guo(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Liuhong Zhu(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Yang Bai(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Fan Ye(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Qingjun Wu(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Shaoli Wang(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Neil Crickmore(University of Sussex), Xuguo Zhou(University of Kentucky), Youjun Zhang(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers)
Nature Communications
June 12, 2020
Cited by 154Open Access
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Abstract

The arms race between entomopathogenic bacteria and their insect hosts is an excellent model for decoding the intricate coevolutionary processes of host-pathogen interaction. Here, we demonstrate that the MAPK signaling pathway is a general switch to trans-regulate differential expression of aminopeptidase N and other midgut genes in an insect host, diamondback moth (Plutella xylostella), thereby countering the virulence effect of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxins. Moreover, the MAPK cascade is activated and fine-tuned by the crosstalk between two major insect hormones, 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) and juvenile hormone (JH) to elicit an important physiological response (i.e. Bt resistance) without incurring the significant fitness costs often associated with pathogen resistance. Hormones are well known to orchestrate physiological trade-offs in a wide variety of organisms, and our work decodes a hitherto undescribed function of these classic hormones and suggests that hormonal signaling plasticity is a general cross-kingdom strategy to fend off pathogens.


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