In supersymmetric theories of fields in fundamental representation we write the Kahler interactions as
\begin{equation}
\Phi ^\dagger e ^{ 2 qV } \Phi
\end{equation}
where $V$ is the vector superfield in the fundamental representation. This is necessary to keep the fields which transform as,
\begin{align}
& \Phi \rightarrow e ^{ i \Lambda } \Phi , \quad V \rightarrow V - \frac{ i }{ 2} \left( \Lambda - \Lambda ^\dagger \right)
\end{align}
gauge invariant.
I would naively think that this requirement would transfer over to fields in other representations. However recently I reading a paper where they introduce fields in the adjoint representation, $\Phi _a$, and I believe they didn't include the gauge contribution and just wrote,
\begin{equation}
\Phi _a ^\dagger \Phi _a
\end{equation}
(though they don't state or write this explicitly so I'm not sure). This doesn't make sense to me since adjoint representation fields still transform. Is there a reason why this would be justified, or did I misunderstand the paper?