Natural genetic variation drives microbiome selection in the Caenorhabditis elegans gut

Host genetic landscapes can shape microbiome assembly in the animal gut by contributing to the establishment of distinct physiological environments. However, the genetic determinants contributing to the stability and variation of these microbiome types remain largely undefined. Here, we use the free...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology 2021-06, Vol.31 (12), p.2603-2618.e9
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Fan, Weckhorst, Jessica L., Assié, Adrien, Hosea, Ciara, Ayoub, Christopher A., Khodakova, Anastasia S., Cabrera, Mario Loeza, Vidal Vilchis, Daniela, Félix, Marie-Anne, Samuel, Buck S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Host genetic landscapes can shape microbiome assembly in the animal gut by contributing to the establishment of distinct physiological environments. However, the genetic determinants contributing to the stability and variation of these microbiome types remain largely undefined. Here, we use the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to identify natural genetic variation among wild strains of C. elegans that drives assembly of distinct microbiomes. To achieve this, we first established a diverse model microbiome that represents the strain-level phylogenetic diversity naturally encountered by C. elegans in the wild. Using this community, we show that C. elegans utilizes immune, xenobiotic, and metabolic signaling pathways to favor the assembly of different microbiome types. Variations in these pathways were associated with enrichment for specific commensals, including the Alphaproteobacteria Ochrobactrum. Using RNAi and mutant strains, we showed that host selection for Ochrobactrum is mediated specifically by host insulin signaling pathways. Ochrobactrum recruitment is blunted in the absence of DAF-2/IGFR and modulated by the competitive action of insulin signaling transcription factors DAF-16/FOXO and PQM-1/SALL2. Further, the ability of C. elegans to enrich for Ochrobactrum as adults is correlated with faster animal growth rates and larger body size at the end of development. These results highlight a new role for the highly conserved insulin signaling pathways in the regulation of gut microbiome composition in C. elegans. [Display omitted] •Development of a model microbiome with high strain-level diversity for C. elegans•Host genetic variation drives distinct microbiome community types in wild C. elegans•Adult gut microbiome composition is driven by insulin signaling networks•Gut microbiome alters host growth and activates insulin signaling pathways Microbiome host association is a common feature across animal phylogeny. Zhang et al. present a new system for studying the interplay with host genetics in establishment and regulation of the microbiome in C. elegans. They show that insulin signaling pathways both drive selection of dominant commensals and mediate responses to the microbiome.
ISSN:0960-9822
1879-0445
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2021.04.046