Whittingham-Dowd, Jayde, Cetnar, Kalina, Rezwana, Ruhi, Norvaisas, Povilas, Kosztelnik, Monika, Parry, Jackie, Au, Catherine, Martin, Jack, Cabreiro, Filipe, Zarate Potes, Alejandra, Urbaniak, Mick, Gems, David, Fathallah, Nadin, Hardgrave, Alex, Benedetto, Alexandre
[
International Worm Meeting,
2021]
Key words Kynurenine pathway, E. faecalis, gut infection, microbiota, lysosome-related organelles autofluorescence. Abstract The kynurenine pathway (KP), main catabolic route for the essential amino-acid tryptophan, is well-known for its immunomodulatory role in mammals. While investigating death fluorescence in C. elegans, anthranilic acid (AA)-loaded lysosome-related organelles (LROs) were previously found responsible for the blue auto-fluorescence seen in the worm gut (Coburn et al. PLOS Biol. 2013). Given the bacteriostatic potential of AA and other kynurenine pathway compounds, we hypothesised that LROs and the KP play a key role in C. elegans gut microbial control. To test this idea, we exposed C. elegans to a worm-pathogenic strain of E. faecalis (OG1RF) and observed changes in gut morphology and autofluorescence dynamics upon infection. Transcriptomics and targeted metabolomics analyses further showed that KP activity is modulated upon E. faecalis infection. Using a combination of KP mutants from the Nollen lab (Van Der Goot et al. PNAS 2012), we observed that inhibition of various KP enzymes differentially affect C. elegans resistance to E. faecalis infection. E. faecalis growth on KP mutant worm extracts confirmed that resistant mutants produce bacteriostatic compounds, which we measured by HPLC. This was verified by the delayed or reduced gut colonisation of OG1RF-GFP (gifted by D. Garsin), and the ability for some mutants to thrive on OG1RF loans. We are currently investigating a broader role for the KP in C. elegans gut microbiota control, notably using newly generated CeMBio fluorescent strains.