| Literature DB >> 36078091 |
Ilena Benoit1,2, Domenico Di Curzio2, Alberto Civetta1, Renée N Douville1,2.
Abstract
The study of human neurological infection faces many technical and ethical challenges. While not as common as mammalian models, the use of Drosophila (fruit fly) in the investigation of virus-host dynamics is a powerful research tool. In this review, we focus on the benefits and caveats of using Drosophila as a model for neurological infections and neuroimmunity. Through the examination of in vitro, in vivo and transgenic systems, we highlight select examples to illustrate the use of flies for the study of exogenous and endogenous viruses associated with neurological disease. In each case, phenotypes in Drosophila are compared to those in human conditions. In addition, we discuss antiviral drug screening in flies and how investigating virus-host interactions may lead to novel antiviral drug targets. Together, we highlight standardized and reproducible readouts of fly behaviour, motor function and neurodegeneration that permit an accurate assessment of neurological outcomes for the study of viral infection in fly models. Adoption of Drosophila as a valuable model system for neurological infections has and will continue to guide the discovery of many novel virus-host interactions.Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila (fruit fly); homologue; human; immunity; infection; models; neurological; transgenic; transposable elements (TEs); virus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36078091 PMCID: PMC9454636 DOI: 10.3390/cells11172685
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Drosophila antiviral and immunity genes with homology in humans.
| Fly Pathway | Human Pathway | Human Gene; | FlyBase a | Literature b | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toll | Cactus | TLR | NFKBIA; IκBα | O | H | [ |
| Dif | NFKB1; NF-κB p50/RELA; NF-κB p65 | H | [ | |||
| Dif | RELB | O | ||||
| Dorsal | NFKB1; NF-κB p50 | H | [ | |||
| Dorsal | RELA; NF-κB p65 | O | ||||
| MyD88 | MYD88 | O | O | [ | ||
| Pelle | IRAK1 | O | [ | |||
| Pelle | IRAK4 | O | ||||
| Pellino | PELI1 & PELI2 | O | H | [ | ||
| Tube | IRAK4 | O | [ | |||
| Tube | MAL | H | [ | |||
| IMD | Bendless | TNFR | UBE2N; UBC13 | O | H | [ |
| Dredd | CASP8; Caspase-8 | H | [ | |||
| Dredd | CASP10 | O | ||||
| Fadd | FADD | O | O | [ | ||
| Iap2 | BIRC3; cIAP2 | H | [ | |||
| Iap2 | BIRC2; cIAP1 | O | ||||
| Imd | RIPK1; RIP1 | H | [ | |||
| Ird5 | IKBKB; IKKβ | O | H | [ | ||
| Ird5 | CHUK; IKKα | O | ||||
| Kenny; IKKγ | IKBKG; NEMO/IKKγ | O | H | [ | ||
| Kenny; IKKγ | OPTN | O | ||||
| Relish | NFKBIA; IκBα/ | O | H | [ | ||
| Tab2 | TAB2 & TAB3 | O | H | [ | ||
| Tak1 | MAP3K7; TAK1 | O | H | [ | ||
| UEV1a | UBE2V1; UEV1a | H | [ | |||
| UEV1a | UBE2V2; UEV2 | O | ||||
| dSTING | cGAS/STING | STING1; STING | O | O | [ | |
| Jak-STAT | Cg14225/Latran | Jak-STAT | IL6ST; GP130 | H | [ | |
| Domeless | LIFR & CNTFR | H | [ | |||
| Domeless | PTPRQ | O | ||||
| Hopscotch | JAK1 & JAK2 | O | H | [ | ||
| Marelle | STAT5A/STAT5B; STAT5 & STAT6 | O | H | [ | ||
| Socs36E | SOCS4 & SOCS5 | O | H | [ | ||
| STAT92E | STAT3 & STAT5A/STAT5B; STAT5 | O | H | [ | ||
| Su(Var)2-10/dPIAS | PIAS1 | O | H | [ | ||
| RNAi | Ago-1, Ago-2, & Ago-3 | RNAi | AGO1, AGO2, & AGO3 | H | [ | |
| Ago-1 | AGO2 | O | ||||
| Ago-3 | PIWIL2 | O | ||||
| Armitage | MOV10L1 | O | H | [ | ||
| Aubergine | PIWIL1; Hiwi | O | H | [ | ||
| Dicer | DICER1 | O | H | [ | ||
| Fmr1 | FMR1 | O | H | [ | ||
| Piwi | PIWIL1; Hiwi | H | [ | |||
| Piwi | PIWIL3; Hiwi3 | O | ||||
| R2d2 | TARBP2 | H | [ | |||
| Rm62/Dmp68 | DDX5; P68 | H | [ | |||
| Vasa intronic gene | SERBP1; PAI-RBP1 | O | H | [ | ||
| Restriction factors | Dcp2 | Restriction factor | DCP2 | O | H | [ |
| Ge-1 | EDC4; RCD-8 | O | H | [ | ||
| FoxK | FOXK1 & FOXK2 | O | O | [ | ||
| Nazo | C19orf12 | O | [ | |||
| Nup98 | NUP98 | O | H | [ | ||
| Ref(2)p | SQSTM1; P62 | O | H | [ | ||
| TREX | TREX1 | O | H | [ |
a FlyBase human orthologs (O) listings with genes denoted as “Yes” for both Best Score and Best Reverse Score. b Cited in literature as homolog (H) or ortholog (O).
Figure 1Comparison of Drosophila and human Toll/TLR and IMD/TNF signalling cascades. Basic diagram of Toll signalling in Drosophila versus Toll-like receptor (TLR) signalling in humans (top). Likewise, simplified diagram of IMD signalling in Drosophila versus TNFα receptor and cGAS/STING signalling in humans (bottom). Homologies between fly and human signalling proteins are shown through similar colour and shape. A detailed description of each pathway and its key proteins is included in the main text. Note that not all known signalling proteins and adaptors are included in the diagram for the sake of simplicity.
Figure 2Comparison of Drosophila and human Jak/STAT and RNAi signalling cascades. Basic diagram of Jak-STAT signalling in Drosophila versus humans (top). Likewise, simplified diagrams of RNAi signalling in Drosophila versus RNAi and RIG-like receptor (RLR) signalling in humans (bottom). Homologies between fly and human signalling proteins are shown through similar colour and shape. A detailed description of each pathway and its key proteins is included in the main text. Note that not all known signalling proteins and adaptors are included in the diagram for the sake of simplicity.
Figure 3Strategies to study neuroinfections using Drosophila models. Virus–host interactions leading to neurological sequelae can be studied in flies using Drosophila cell lines, larvae or flies infected with exogenous or endogenous viruses and through viral transgenic systems. Outcomes of in vivo infection in larvae and adult flies can be examined through a variety of behavioural, neuropathological and pharmacological approaches. Drosophila-derived cell lines can further be used to delineate molecular processes associated with viral infection and host immunity, due to the ease of expression of viral or cellular proteins, or through genetic or cellular manipulations using CRISPR and RNAi, respectively. Examples of these approaches can be found throughout the main text.