Microbiota drives the sexually dimorphic infection outcomes in mealworm beetles
Microbiota drives the sexually dimorphic infection outcomes in mealworm beetles
Seal, S.; Kumar, D.; Thunga, P.; Khangar, P.; Gupta, M.; Basu, D. N.; Raychoudhury, R.; Khan, I.
AbstractSexually dimorphic responses to pathogenic infections in animals may stem from sex-specific differences in their life history and immune investment. Recent evidence highlights that such sex-specific variations in immune responses can also be critically regulated by microbiota. However, direct experiments to test how microbiota jointly impacts sex-specific immunity and vulnerability to pathogens are still limited. To this end, we used Tenebrio molitor beetles to first establish that sexes appear to differ in their microbiota composition and infection responses. Females were more vulnerable to bacterial infections and carried a higher bacterial load than males. When we depleted the microbiome, only females improved their post-infection survival, leading to a loss of sex-specific infection outcomes. Males, on the other hand, remained unaffected. Microbiota reconstitution (via feeding on faecal matter) of microbiota-depleted females increased their susceptibility to infection again, restoring the sexual dimorphism. We thus found a causal association between microbiome and infection responses. We also found reduced expression of an antimicrobial peptide tenecin 1 in females, which could be associated with their higher infection susceptibility, but such immune gene-vs-phenotypic associations were not consistent across microbiota manipulations. Immune strategies that are required to mediate the causal links between microbiome and infection response might thus vary with microbiota manipulations, warranting future investigations.