eLife (Aug 2024)

Hosts manipulate lifestyle switch and pathogenicity heterogeneity of opportunistic pathogens in the single-cell resolution

  • Ziguang Wang,
  • Shuai Li,
  • Sheng Zhang,
  • Tianyu Zhang,
  • Yujie Wu,
  • Anqi Liu,
  • Kui Wang,
  • Xiaowen Ji,
  • Haiqun Cao,
  • Yinglao Zhang,
  • Eng King Tan,
  • Yongcheng Wang,
  • Yirong Wang,
  • Wei Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.96789
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

Read online

Host-microbe interactions are virtually bidirectional, but how the host affects their microbiome is poorly understood. Here, we report that the host is a critical modulator to regulate the lifestyle switch and pathogenicity heterogeneity of the opportunistic pathogens Serratia marcescens utilizing the Drosophila and bacterium model system. First, we find that Drosophila larvae efficiently outcompete S. marcescens and typically drive a bacterial switch from pathogenicity to commensalism toward the fly. Furthermore, Drosophila larvae reshape the transcriptomic and metabolic profiles of S. marcescens characterized by a lifestyle switch. More importantly, the host alters pathogenicity and heterogeneity of S. marcescens in the single-cell resolution. Finally, we find that larvae-derived AMPs are required to recapitulate the response of S. marcescens to larvae. Altogether, our findings provide an insight into the pivotal roles of the host in harnessing the life history and heterogeneity of symbiotic bacterial cells, advancing knowledge of the reciprocal relationships between the host and pathogen.

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