21349119

not annotated - annotated - LINNAEUS only

Differentially expressed genes in silkworm cell cultures in response to infection by Wolbachia and Cardinium endosymbionts.

Wolbachia and Cardinium are bacterial endosymbionts that are widely distributed amongst arthropods. Both cause reproductive alterations, such as cytoplasmic incompatibility, parthenogenesis and feminization. Here we studied differentially expressed genes in Wolbachia- and Cardinium-infected Bm-aff3 silkworm cells using a silkworm microarray. Wolbachia infection did not alter gene expression or induce or suppress immune responses. In contrast, Cardinium infection induced many immune-related genes, including antimicrobial peptides, pattern recognition receptors and a serine protease. Host immune responses differed, possibly because of the different cell wall structures of Wolbachia and Cardinium because the former lacks genes encoding lipopolysaccharide components and two racemases for peptidoglycan formation. A few possibly non-immune-related genes were differentially expressed, but their involvement in host reproductive alteration was unclear.



Ann file

T1	Species 34 42	silkworm

N1 Reference T1 Taxonomy:7091

T2 Species 426 434 silkworm

N2 Reference T2 Taxonomy:7091

T3 Species 449 457 silkworm

N3 Reference T3 Taxonomy:7091