Abstract

The gut epithelium is an ancient site of complex communication between the animal immune system and the microbial world. While elements of self-non-self receptors and effector mechanisms differ greatly among animal phyla, some aspects of recognition, regulation, and response are broadly conserved. A gene regulatory network (GRN) approach provides a means to investigate the nature of this conservation and divergence even as more peripheral functional details remain incompletely understood. The sea urchin embryo is an unparalleled experimental model for detangling the GRNs that govern embryonic development. By applying this theoretical framework to the free swimming, feeding larval stage of the purple sea urchin, it is possible to delineate the conserved regulatory circuitry that regulates the gut-associated immune response. This model provides a morphologically simple system in which to efficiently unravel regulatory connections that are phylogenetically relevant to immunity in vertebrates. Here, we review the organism-wide cellular and transcriptional immune response of the sea urchin larva. A large set of transcription factors and signal systems, including epithelial expression of interleukin 17 (IL17), are important mediators in the activation of the early gut-associated response. Many of these have homologs that are active in vertebrate immunity, while others are ancient in animals but absent in vertebrates or specific to echinoderms. This larval model provides a means to experimentally characterize immune function encoded in the sea urchin genome and the regulatory interconnections that control immune response and resolution across the tissues of the organism.

Highlights

  • Frontiers in ImmunologyAn Organismal Model for Gene Regulatory Networks in the Gut-Associated Immune Response

  • Reviewed by: Lisa Rizzetto, Fondazione Edmund Mach, Italy Jeffrey A

  • These results indicate that highly regulated interleukin 17 (IL17) expression in the sea urchin gut epithelium and signaling through IL17-R1 form a central axis of larval gut-associated immunity

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Summary

Frontiers in Immunology

An Organismal Model for Gene Regulatory Networks in the Gut-Associated Immune Response. The sea urchin embryo is an unparalleled experimental model for detangling the GRNs that govern embryonic development By applying this theoretical framework to the free swimming, feeding larval stage of the purple sea urchin, it is possible to delineate the conserved regulatory circuitry that regulates the gut-associated immune response. A large set of transcription factors and signal systems, including epithelial expression of interleukin 17 (IL17), are important mediators in the activation of the early gut-associated response Many of these have homologs that are active in vertebrate immunity, while others are ancient in animals but absent in vertebrates or specific to echinoderms. This larval model provides a means to experimentally characterize immune function encoded in the sea urchin genome and the regulatory interconnections that control immune response and resolution across the tissues of the organism. The enormous progress made in the recent years in the field of pathology will surely fertilize the field of pure zoology and at the same time the evolutionary standpoint of the latter field can provide solutions to medical problems in a comparative pathologic way. [Elya Metchnikoff [1]]

CONSERVATION AND INNOVATION IN ANIMAL IMMUNITY
SEVERAL CELL TYPES MEDIATE THE LARVAL IMMUNE RESPONSE
CONCLUSION AND PERSPECTIVES

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