Dual function of a bee (apis cerana) inhibitor cysteine knot
peptide that acts as an antifungal peptide and insecticidal venom toxin
Dev Comp Immunol. 2014 Aug 5. pii: S0145-305X(14)00206-7
Inhibitor cysteine knot (ICK) peptides exhibit ion channel
blocking, insecticidal, and antimicrobial activities, but currently, no functional
roles for bee-derived ICK peptides have been identified. In this study, a bee
(Apis cerana) ICK peptide (AcICK) that acts as an antifungal peptide and as an
insecticidal venom toxin was identified. AcICK contains an ICK fold that is
expressed in the epidermis, fat body, or venom gland and is present as a
6.6-kDa peptide in bee venom. Recombinant AcICK peptide (expressed in
baculovirus-infected insect cells) bound directly to Beauveria bassiana and
Fusarium graminearum, but not to Escherichia coli or Bacillus thuringiensis.
Consistent with these findings, AcICK showed antifungal activity, indicating
that AcICK acts as an antifungal peptide. Furthermore, AcICK expression is
induced in the fat body and epidermis after injection with B. bassiana. These
results provide insight into the role of AcICK during the innate immune
response following fungal infection. Additionally, we show that AcICK has
insecticidal activity. Our results demonstrate a functional role for AcICK in
bees: AcICK acts as an antifungal peptide in innate immune reactions in the
body and as an insecticidal toxin in venom. The finding that the AcICK peptide
functions with different mechanisms of action in the body and in venom
highlights the two-pronged strategy that is possible with the bee ICK peptide.
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