Abstract
Ancestral signaling pathways serve critical roles in metazoan development, physiology, and immunity. We report an evolutionary interspecies communication pathway involving a central Ixodes scapularis tick receptor termed Dome1, which acquired a mammalian cytokine receptor motif exhibiting high affinity for interferon-gamma (IFN-g). Host-derived IFN-g facilitates Dome1-mediated activation of the Ixodes JAK-STAT pathway. This accelerates tick blood meal acquisition and development while upregulating antimicrobial components. The Dome1-JAK-STAT pathway, which exists in most Ixodid tick genomes, regulates the regeneration and proliferation of gut cells-including stem cells-and dictates metamorphosis through the Hedgehog and Notch-Delta networks, ultimately affecting Ixodes vectorial competence. We highlight the evolutionary dependence of I. scapularis on mammalian hosts through cross-species signaling mechanisms that dually influence arthropod immunity and development.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Rana, V. S., Kitsou, C., Dutta, S., Ronzetti, M. H., Zhang, M., Bernard, Q., … Pal, U. (2023). Dome1-JAK-STAT signaling between parasite and host integrates vector immunity and development. Science, 379(6628). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abl3837
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.