Bacteria were the first inhabitants on Earth and have interacted with animals since they originated. For microbivore nematodes - one of the earliest metazoans- bacteria is both their food and microbiota. Long-term adaptations to one another rely on molecular and behavioral strategies that are transmitted to the progeny. Previously we showed that the interaction of C. elegans with pathogens of moderate virulence - like P. aeruginosa PAO1 - leads to dauer formation as an adaptive response starting in the F2 of animals exposed to pathogens (Palominos et al., 2017). This inherited mechanism is transgenerational and uses effectors of the RNAi machinery. Small RNAs (sRNAs) are candidate messengers of this information because they selectively reach a target, are mobile between organisms, and can mediate transgenerationally stable epigenetic modifications. In this work we investigated how the small RNA expression profile of worms and their intestinal bacteria change across two generations. We reasoned that bacterial gene expression in a naive host (F1) is different when in contact with a previously exposed host (F2), and that bacterial sRNAs are relevant to trigger a host adaptive response. To get insight in the interspecies and intergenerational dynamics of small RNA expression, we performed dual RNA-seq of two generations of C. elegans and its intestinal bacteria (P. aeruginosa PAO1 or E. coli OP50) and RNAseq of naive bacteria never exposed to worms. We found that bacteria colonizing F2 animals specifically upregulate two transcriptional units imbedded in the rsmY regulatory non-coding gene (p < 0.01,
log2FC 4.1). This suggests that regulation of this bacterial gene is affected by the experience of the host parents, because their expression is different in first and second generation of worms (p < 0.01,
log2FC 3.2). P. aeruginosa with a deletion in the rsmY gene failed to induce dauer formation confirming that rsmY RNA is required for F2 diapause entry in worms. In summary, we found that rsmY is a mediator of the bidirectional transcriptional modulation of two interacting species.