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Metabolic reprogramming of Helicoverpa armigera larvae by HearNPV facilitates viral replication and host immune suppression.

Zhiqiang TianLin ZhuJ P MichaudMeng ZhaJie ChengZhongjian ShenXiaoming LiuXiaoxia Liu
Published in: Molecular ecology (2022)
Baculoviruses are highly evolved parasites that genetically reprogram the developing phenotype of their host insect to produce a vessel for virus replication and dispersal. Here we show that larvae of Helicoverpa armigera infected with HearNPV accumulate glucose in the midgut, which reduces food consumption and alters the dynamics of pathways governing metabolism and immunity. We used transcriptomics to demonstrate the role of the insulin signaling pathway in regulating the HearNPV infection process. Dietary restriction decreased mortality of infected larvae and reduced viral replication prior to death, whereas dietary supplementation with glucose produced the opposite effects. The expression of most tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) and energy metabolism-related genes was reduced in infected larvae, whereas the expression of immunity-, glycolysis- and insulin-related genes was enhanced. Treatment of infected larvae with insulin increased their survival, reduced viral replication, and inhibited climbing behavior compared to a control treatment with DMSO, whereas RNAi suppression of the insulin receptor gene produced the opposite effects. Inhibition of glycolysis with dichloroacetate (DCA) promoted viral replication and accelerated larval death, but inhibition of the TCA cycle with 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) did not, although both diminished climbing behavior. This work demonstrates that successful baculovirus infections hinge on metabolic reprogramming of the host and concurrent suppression of immune responses in the larval midgut, with the insulin signaling pathway mediating a trade-off between glucose metabolism and virus resistance.
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