Hematopoietic plasticity mapped in and other insects.

Elife

Biological Research Centre, Institute of Genetics, Innate Immunity Group, Eötvös Loránd Research Network, Szeged, Hungary.

Published: August 2022

Hemocytes, similar to vertebrate blood cells, play important roles in insect development and immunity, but it is not well understood how they perform their tasks. New technology, in particular single-cell transcriptomic analysis in combination with genetics, may now change this picture. This review aims to make sense of recently published data, focusing on and comparing to data from other drosophilids, the malaria mosquito, , and the silkworm, . Basically, the new data support the presence of a few major classes of hemocytes: (1) a highly heterogenous and plastic class of professional phagocytes with many functions, called plasmatocytes in and granular cells in other insects. (2) A conserved class of cells that control melanin deposition around parasites and wounds, called crystal cells in , and oenocytoids in other insects. (3) A new class of cells, the primocytes, so far only identified in . They are related to cells of the so-called posterior signaling center of the larval hematopoietic organ, which controls the hematopoiesis of other hemocytes. (4) Different kinds of specialized cells, like the lamellocytes in , for the encapsulation of parasites. These cells undergo rapid evolution, and the homology relationships between such cells in different insects are uncertain. Lists of genes expressed in the different hemocyte classes now provide a solid ground for further investigation of function.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9348853PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.78906DOI Listing

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