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Spatial and Temporal Coordination of Duox/TrpA1/Dh31 and IMD Pathways is Required for the Efficient Elimination of Pathogenic Bacteria in the Intestine of Larvae

Overview
Journal Elife
Specialty Biology
Date 2024 Nov 22
PMID 39576741
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Abstract

Multiple gut antimicrobial mechanisms are coordinated in space and time to efficiently fight foodborne pathogens. In , production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) together with intestinal cell renewal play a key role in eliminating gut microbes. A complementary mechanism would be to isolate and treat pathogenic bacteria while allowing colonization by commensals. Using real-time imaging to follow the fate of ingested bacteria, we demonstrate that while commensal freely circulate within the intestinal lumen, pathogenic strains such as or , are blocked in the anterior midgut where they are rapidly eliminated by antimicrobial peptides. This sequestration of pathogenic bacteria in the anterior midgut requires the Duox enzyme in enterocytes, and both TrpA1 and Dh31 in enteroendocrine cells. Supplementing larval food with hCGRP, the human homolog of Dh31, is sufficient to block the bacteria, suggesting the existence of a conserved mechanism. While the immune deficiency (IMD) pathway is essential for eliminating the trapped bacteria, it is dispensable for the blockage. Genetic manipulations impairing bacterial compartmentalization result in abnormal colonization of posterior midgut regions by pathogenic bacteria. Despite a functional IMD pathway, this ectopic colonization leads to bacterial proliferation and larval death, demonstrating the critical role of bacteria anterior sequestration in larval defense. Our study reveals a temporal orchestration during which pathogenic bacteria, but not innocuous, are confined in the anterior part of the midgut in which they are eliminated in an IMD-pathway-dependent manner.

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Liu Y, Luo R, Bai S, Lemaitre B, Zhang H, Li X ISME J. 2024; 18(1).

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