Nitric oxide radicals are emitted by wasp eggs to kill mold fungi.
Erhard StrohmGudrun HerznerJoachim RutherMartin KaltenpothTobias EnglPublished in: eLife (2019)
Detrimental microbes caused the evolution of a great diversity of antimicrobial defenses in plants and animals. Insects developing underground seem particularly threatened. Here we show that the eggs of a solitary digger wasp, the European beewolf Philanthus triangulum, emit large amounts of gaseous nitric oxide (NO⋅) to protect themselves and their provisions, paralyzed honeybees, against mold fungi. We provide evidence that a NO-synthase (NOS) is involved in the generation of the extraordinary concentrations of nitrogen radicals in brood cells (~1500 ppm NO⋅ and its oxidation product NO2⋅). Sequencing of the beewolf NOS gene revealed no conspicuous differences to related species. However, due to alternative splicing, the NOS-mRNA in beewolf eggs lacks an exon near the regulatory domain. This preventive external application of high doses of NO⋅ by wasp eggs represents an evolutionary key innovation that adds a remarkable novel facet to the array of functions of the important biological effector NO⋅.
Keyphrases
- nitric oxide synthase
- nitric oxide
- hydrogen peroxide
- single cell
- genome wide
- induced apoptosis
- staphylococcus aureus
- cell cycle arrest
- dendritic cells
- high throughput
- regulatory t cells
- transcription factor
- oxidative stress
- signaling pathway
- dna methylation
- high resolution
- gene expression
- copy number
- genetic diversity
- drug induced
- genome wide identification