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  4. In vivo RNA interference analysis reveals an unexpected role for GNBP1 in the defense against Gram-positive bacterial infection in Drosophila adults
 
research article

In vivo RNA interference analysis reveals an unexpected role for GNBP1 in the defense against Gram-positive bacterial infection in Drosophila adults

Pili-Floury, Sebastien
•
Leulier, François
•
Takahashi, Kuniaki
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2004
Journal of Biological Chemistry

The Drosophila immune system discriminates between different classes of infectious microbes and responds with pathogen-specific defense reactions via the selective activation of the Toll and the immune deficiency (Imd) signaling pathways. The Toll pathway mediates most defenses against Gram-positive bacteria and fungi, whereas the Imd pathway is required to resist Gram-negative bacterial infection. Microbial recognition is achieved through peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs); Gram-positive bacteria activate the Toll pathway through a circulating PGRP (PGRP-SA), and Gram-negative bacteria activate the Imd pathway via PGRP-LC, a putative transmembrane receptor, and PGRP-LE. Gram-negative binding proteins (GNBPs) were originally identified in Bombyx mori for their capacity to bind various microbial compounds. Three GNBPs and two related proteins are encoded in the Drosophila genome, but their function is not known. Using inducible expression of GNBP1 double-stranded RNA, we now demonstrate that GNBP1 is required for Toll activation in response to Gram-positive bacterial infection; GNBP1 double-stranded RNA expression renders flies susceptible to Gram-positive bacterial infection and reduces the induction of the antifungal peptide encoding gene Drosomycin after infection by Gram-positive bacteria but not after fungal infection. This phenotype induced by GNBP1 inactivation is identical to a loss-of-function mutation in PGRP-SA, and our genetic studies suggest that GNBP1 acts upstream of the Toll ligand Spätzle. Altogether, our results demonstrate that the detection of Gram-positive bacteria in Drosophila requires two putative pattern recognition receptors, PGRP-SA and GNBP1.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M313324200
Web of Science ID

WOS:000220334900100

PubMed ID

14722090

Author(s)
Pili-Floury, Sebastien
Leulier, François
Takahashi, Kuniaki
Saigo, Kaoru
Samain, Emmanuel
Ueda, Ryu
Lemaitre, Bruno  
Date Issued

2004

Publisher

American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Published in
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume

279

Issue

13

Start page

12848

End page

53

Subjects

Genetic Predisposition to Disease

•

RNA Interference

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
UPLEM  
Available on Infoscience
September 17, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/53752
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