In vivo microbial coevolution favours host protection and plastic downregulation of immunity

Microbiota can protect their hosts from infection. The short timescales in which microbes can evolve presents the possibility that ‘protective microbes’ can take-over from the immune system of longer-lived hosts in the coevolutionary race against pathogens. Here, we found that coevolution between a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ford, SA, King, KC
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2020
_version_ 1826295872600670208
author Ford, SA
King, KC
author_facet Ford, SA
King, KC
author_sort Ford, SA
collection OXFORD
description Microbiota can protect their hosts from infection. The short timescales in which microbes can evolve presents the possibility that ‘protective microbes’ can take-over from the immune system of longer-lived hosts in the coevolutionary race against pathogens. Here, we found that coevolution between a protective bacterium (Enterococcus faecalis) and a virulent pathogen (Staphylococcus aureus) within an animal population (Caenorhabditis elegans) resulted in more disease suppression than when the protective bacterium adapted to uninfected hosts. At the same time, more protective E. faecalis populations became costlier to harbour and altered the expression of 134 host genes. Many of these genes appear to be related to the mechanism of protection, reactive oxygen species production. Crucially, more protective E. faecalis populations downregulated a key immune gene, sodh-1, known to be effective against S. aureus infection. These results suggest that a microbial line of defence is favoured by microbial coevolution and may cause hosts to plastically divest of their own immunity.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T04:07:39Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:c6c06d7e-e0bd-4b71-871b-7ebdad24ccc6
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T04:07:39Z
publishDate 2020
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:c6c06d7e-e0bd-4b71-871b-7ebdad24ccc62022-03-27T06:40:12ZIn vivo microbial coevolution favours host protection and plastic downregulation of immunityJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:c6c06d7e-e0bd-4b71-871b-7ebdad24ccc6EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Press2020Ford, SAKing, KCMicrobiota can protect their hosts from infection. The short timescales in which microbes can evolve presents the possibility that ‘protective microbes’ can take-over from the immune system of longer-lived hosts in the coevolutionary race against pathogens. Here, we found that coevolution between a protective bacterium (Enterococcus faecalis) and a virulent pathogen (Staphylococcus aureus) within an animal population (Caenorhabditis elegans) resulted in more disease suppression than when the protective bacterium adapted to uninfected hosts. At the same time, more protective E. faecalis populations became costlier to harbour and altered the expression of 134 host genes. Many of these genes appear to be related to the mechanism of protection, reactive oxygen species production. Crucially, more protective E. faecalis populations downregulated a key immune gene, sodh-1, known to be effective against S. aureus infection. These results suggest that a microbial line of defence is favoured by microbial coevolution and may cause hosts to plastically divest of their own immunity.
spellingShingle Ford, SA
King, KC
In vivo microbial coevolution favours host protection and plastic downregulation of immunity
title In vivo microbial coevolution favours host protection and plastic downregulation of immunity
title_full In vivo microbial coevolution favours host protection and plastic downregulation of immunity
title_fullStr In vivo microbial coevolution favours host protection and plastic downregulation of immunity
title_full_unstemmed In vivo microbial coevolution favours host protection and plastic downregulation of immunity
title_short In vivo microbial coevolution favours host protection and plastic downregulation of immunity
title_sort in vivo microbial coevolution favours host protection and plastic downregulation of immunity
work_keys_str_mv AT fordsa invivomicrobialcoevolutionfavourshostprotectionandplasticdownregulationofimmunity
AT kingkc invivomicrobialcoevolutionfavourshostprotectionandplasticdownregulationofimmunity