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Abstract

The use of modern molecular biology tools and simple but powerful tractable model organisms such as Drosophila has contributed significantly to our recent advances in the innate immunity field, notably phagocytosis. Since 2001, many phagocytic transmembrane receptors, potential opsonins, and in some cases their ligands, have been discovered. Among them, the Nimrod family, which contains key phagocytic receptors and potential opsonins, deserves special interest as accumulating genetic and biochemical evidence points to their critical role in phagocytosis of both bacteria and apoptotic cells. In this PhD thesis we provided a deeper characterization of two Nimrod transmembrane receptors, Eater and NimC1. In particular, by using single or combined mutations in eater and NimC1, we aimed to further elucidate i) the involvement of each receptor in bacterial phagocytosis and ii) the role of Eater in hemocytes sessility and adhesion. Both receptors have been shown to be specifically expressed in hemocytes, the insect blood cells, and to mediate Gram-positive but not Gram-negative bacteria phagocytosis. In this work we generated a novel NimC1 mutant and demonstrated that the single NimC1 deletion does not affect phagocytosis of bacteria. However, by using the compound NimC1;eater mutant we were able to show that these receptors contribute in a synergistic way to microbes engulfment, but that Eater can bypass the requirement for NimC1. Moreover, we discovered that NimC1, but not Eater, is required for phagocytosis of non-immunogenic particles, namely latex beads and yeast zymosan. Therefore, this work provides evidences of Eater and NimC1 being the main receptors for bacteria phagocytosis, and suggests that those proteins likely play distinct roles in microbial uptake, as tethering and docking receptors. The second part of this thesis re-addresses the role of Eater in hemocyte sessility and adhesion. A previous study showed that this phagocytic receptor is essential to mediate blood cell sessility to the animal integument during larval stages. However, a series of questions about Eater-mediated sessility remains still open. For example, is Eater mediating hemocyte adhesion also in adult flies? And yet, does Eater mediate hemocyte sessility by regulating the expression of cell adhesion genes, therefore functioning as a signalling receptor? By using eater1 mutant adult flies, we showed that, as in larval stages, Eater is required in adult hemocytes to confer adhesion and sessility. Interestingly, we uncovered a potential role of sessility in hemocyte survival during adulthood, since eater1 flies have a decreased number of blood cells. Preliminary transcriptomics analysis led us to hypothesise that this receptor might not work as a signalling molecule, but rather as an adhesion protein providing the initial hemocyte contact to its target surface. In line with Eater’s role as an adhesion molecule, its over-expression in hemocytes leads to the formation of enlarged cells compared to control. To conclude, this thesis extended our knowledge on the Drosophila cellular immune response, by providing new insights on two Nimrod phagocytic receptors.

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