Regulation of energy distribution into different organs is crucial for the organism. Immune response requires increased amount of energy/nutrition and overall metabolism adjustment is thus necessary. We are interested in an inter-organ communication which ensures proper energy re-distribution during immune response in Drosophila melanogaster model.
Head of the laboratory: doc. Mgr. Tomáš Doležal, Ph.D.
Labmanager: Lucie Hrádková
Research assistant: Mgr. Lenka Chodáková, Ph.D.
Postdocs: Dr. Ellen McMullen, rer. nat.
Students: Mgr. Pavla Nedbalová
Mgr. Tereza Dolejšková
Vojtěch Černý
Jakub Sysel
We employ three different types of infection in our experimental models – ① parasitoid wasp Leptopilina boulardi infection of Drosophila larvae, ② extracellular bacteria Streptococcus pneumonia infection of Drosophila adult fly causing an acute infection and ③ intracellular Listeria monocytogenes infection of adult fly causing a chronic infection. We analyze tissue-specific gene expressions and signaling, metabolites, effects on development and behavior throughout the infection and test impacts of various genetic manipulations on systemic physiology.
We have recently found that a systemic metabolic switch, which changes flow of energy from development towards immunity during immune response, is mediated by extracellular adenosine (e-Ado):
e-Ado is released from immune cells, which are activated to proliferate and differentiate into specialized immune cells - lamellocytes - upon the parasitoid wasp attack. Lamellocytes production requires energy, which is obtained by slowing down the host development. The switch from development to immune response requires e-Ado as a mediator. By releasing e-Ado, immune cells are able to usurp energy from the rest of the organism. This experimentally demonstrates a selfish (or privileged) behavior of immune system, which is hierarchically above all the other organs in the organism during immune challenge; theoretical concept of selfish immune system in humans was recently proposed by Dr. Reiner Straub.
Extracellular adenosine (e-Ado) is an important regulatory molecule with a low physiological concentration that can rapidly increase during tissue damage, inflammation, ischemia or hypoxia. During hypoxia or cellular metabolic stress, adenosine can be transported by nucleoside transporters to extracellular space from cells where its concentration raises up due to excessive breakdown of ATP. e-Ado then informs the surrounding tissues about the metabolic state of the cells/tissues via adenosine receptors. This can lead to various responses as vasodilation, increase of blood flow and therefore substrate delivery or it can stimulate glycogenolysis, providing energy substrates from stores to overcome stress. Increased e-Ado may also lead to a suppression of metabolic processes in certain tissues to conserve overall energy.
Additional information about e-Ado and details of our previous studies of e-Ado role in flies can be found in Tomas Dolezal's habilitation thesis.
Is it possible that adenosine plays similar role during immune response in humans? You can read editorial Adenosine: a selfish-immunity signal? on this topic.
Immune cells can suppress their own privilege behavior
The privilege of the immune system is vital in acute threats to the organism, but sooner or later it is necessary to dampen this behavior again so that privilege does not become selfish (as is the case with immunity that has been activated for too long) and the organism is not exhausted. How this is ensured showed our next model of activation of the immune response, namely bacterial infection of adult flies. We inject a precisely defined amount of bacteria (e.g. streptococcus or listeria) into the fly body. In studying these reactions, we found that the immune cells themselves again produce an enzyme at a later stage of the immune reaction, which reduces the amount of adenosine and thus suppresses its effects on the energy metabolism of the fly. When we genetically suppressed the functioning of this enzyme, it might help the fruit fly to fight streptococcus in the short term, but at the expense of greater depletion of energy reserves. In the longer term, however, it was rather harmful to flies, and in chronic listeria infection, it led to a shorter life and, on the contrary, benefited bacteria that probably got more nutrients at the expense of the host.
The results of this work were published in PLoS Pathogens:
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Branišovská 1645/31a, 370 05 České Budějovice Tel. 387 776 201 | This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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