Using machine learning to predict protein-protein interactions between a zombie ant fungus and its carpenter ant host

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Parasitic fungi produce proteins that modulate virulence, alter host physiology, and trigger host responses. These proteins, classified as a type of "effector," often act via protein-protein interactions (PPIs). The fungal parasite Ophiocordyceps camponoti-floridani (zombie ant fungus) manipulates Camponotus floridanus (carpenter ant) behavior to promote transmission. The most striking aspect of this behavioral change is a summit disease phenotype where infected hosts ascend and attach to an elevated position. Plausibly, interspecific PPIs drive aspects of Ophiocordyceps infection and host manipulation. Machine learning PPI predictions offer high-throughput methods to produce mechanistic hypotheses on how this behavioral manipulation occurs. Using D-SCRIPT to predict host-parasite PPIs, we found ca. 6000 interactions involving 2083 host proteins and 129 parasite proteins, which are encoded by genes upregulated during manipulated behavior. We identified multiple overrepresentations of functional annotations among these proteins. The strongest signals in the host highlighted neuromodulatory G-protein coupled receptors and oxidation-reduction processes. We also detected Camponotus structural and gene-regulatory proteins. In the parasite, we found enrichment of Ophiocordyceps proteases and frequent involvement of novel small secreted proteins with unknown functions. From these results, we provide new hypotheses on potential parasite effectors and host targets underlying zombie ant behavioral manipulation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number13821
Pages (from-to)1-16
JournalScientific Reports
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, Springer Nature Limited.

Funding

I.W., W.C.B., and C.dB. conceived the project and wrote the manuscript. W.C.B. performed the secretome annotation. I.W. performed PPI predictions, enrichment analyses, and visualization. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (CAREER IOS-1941546 to C.dB).

FundersFunder number
National Science FoundationIOS-1941546

    Keywords

    • Animals
    • Ants
    • Behavior Control
    • Endopeptidases
    • Machine Learning
    • Peptide Hydrolases

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