Cell Reports (Nov 2024)

Paired C-type lectin receptors mediate specific recognition of divergent oomycete pathogens in C. elegans

  • Kenneth Liu,
  • Manish Grover,
  • Franziska Trusch,
  • Christina Vagena-Pantoula,
  • Domenica Ippolito,
  • Michalis Barkoulas

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 11
p. 114906

Abstract

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Summary: Innate immune responses can be triggered upon detection of pathogen- or damage-associated molecular patterns by host receptors that are often present on the surface of immune cells. While invertebrates like Caenorhabditis elegans lack professional immune cells, they still mount pathogen-specific responses. However, the identity of host receptors in the nematode remains poorly understood. Here, we show that C-type lectin receptors mediate species-specific recognition of divergent oomycetes in C. elegans. A CLEC-27/CLEC-35 pair is essential for recognition of the oomycete Myzocytiopsis humicola, while a CLEC-26/CLEC-36 pair is required for detection of Haptoglossa zoospora. Both clec pairs are transcriptionally regulated through a shared promoter by the conserved PRD-like homeodomain transcription factor CEH-37/OTX2 and act in sensory neurons and the anterior intestine to trigger a protective immune response in the epidermis. This system enables redundant tissue sensing of oomycete threats through canonical CLEC receptors and host defense via cross-tissue communication.

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