iScience (Jul 2022)

Interspecies effectors of a transgenerational memory of bacterial infection in Caenorhabditis elegans

  • Marcela Legüe,
  • Mauricio Caneo,
  • Blanca Aguila,
  • Bernardo Pollak,
  • Andrea Calixto

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 7
p. 104627

Abstract

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Summary: The inheritance of memory is an adaptive trait. Microbes challenge the immunity of organisms and trigger behavioral adaptations that can be inherited, but how bacteria produce inheritance of a trait is unknown. We use Caenorhabditis elegans and its bacteria to study the transgenerational RNA dynamics of interspecies crosstalk leading to a heritable behavior. A heritable response of C. elegans to microbes is the pathogen-induced diapause (PIDF), a state of suspended animation to evade infection. We identify RsmY, a small RNA involved in quorum sensing in Pseudomonas aeruginosa as a trigger of PIDF. The histone methyltransferase (HMT) SET-18/SMYD3 and the argonaute HRDE-1, which promotes multi-generational silencing in the germline, are also needed for PIDF initiation. The HMT SET-25/EHMT2 is necessary for memory maintenance in the transgenerational lineage. Our work is a starting point to understanding microbiome-induced inheritance of acquired traits, and the transgenerational influence of microbes in health and disease.

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