Introduction: The midgut epithelium functions as tissue for nutrient uptake as well as physical barrier against pathogens. Additionally, it responds to pathogen contact by production and release of various factors including antimicrobial peptides, similar to the systemic innate immune response. However, if such a response is restricted to a local stimulus or if it appears in response to a systemic infection, too is a rather underexplored topic in insect immunity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMammalian models of human disease are expensive and subject to ethical restrictions. Here, we present an independent platform for high-throughput screening, using larvae of the tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta, combining diagnostic imaging modalities for a comprehensive characterization of aberrant phenotypes. For validation, we use bacterial/chemical-induced gut inflammation to generate a colitis-like phenotype and identify significant alterations in morphology, tissue properties, and intermediary metabolism, which aggravate with disease progression and can be rescued by antimicrobial treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith the growing importance of the black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens) for both sustainable food production and waste management as well as for science, a great demand of understanding its immune system arises. Here, we present the first description of the circulating larval hemocytes with special emphasis on uptake of microorganisms and distinguishing hemocyte types. With histological, zymographic, and cytometric methods and with a set of hemocyte binding lectins and antibodies, the hemocytes of H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHaematopoietic organs (HOs) in Lepidoptera are widely recognised as the source for at least two haemocyte types. With new specific markers for oenocytoids and spherule cells and a method to identify prohaemocytes, the haemocytes formed in and released by the HOs of Manduca sexta are characterised. Differentiation of HO-cells to haemocytes other than plasmatocytes and prohaemocytes neither occurs in the organ itself nor in cells released in vitro by the HOs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith a set of haemocyte specific markers novel findings on haematopoiesis in the Manduca sexta embryo are presented. We identify a hitherto unknown paired haematopoietic cluster, the abdominal haemocyte cluster in abdominal segment 7 (A7-HCC). These clusters are localised at distinct positions and are established at around katatrepsis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Stick insects (Phasmatodea) use repellent chemical substances (allomones) for defence which are released from so-called defence glands in the prothorax. These glands differ in size between species, and are under neuronal control from the CNS. The detailed neural innervation and possible differences between species are not studied so far.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF