Abstract

Caenorhabditis elegans and its cognate bacterial diet comprise a reliable, widespread model to study diet and microbiota effects on host physiology. Nonetheless, how diet influences the rate at which neurons die remains largely unknown. A number of models have been used in C. elegans as surrogates for neurodegeneration. One of these is a C. elegans strain expressing a neurotoxic allele of the mechanosensory abnormality protein 4 (MEC-4d) degenerin/epithelial Na+ (DEG/ENaC) channel, which causes the progressive degeneration of the touch receptor neurons (TRNs). Using this model, our study evaluated the effect of various dietary bacteria on neurodegeneration dynamics. Although degeneration of TRNs was steady and completed at adulthood in the strain routinely used for C. elegans maintenance (Escherichia coli OP50), it was significantly reduced in environmental and other laboratory bacterial strains. Strikingly, neuroprotection reached more than 40% in the E. coli HT115 strain. HT115 protection was long lasting well into old age of animals and was not restricted to the TRNs. Small amounts of HT115 on OP50 bacteria as well as UV-killed HT115 were still sufficient to produce neuroprotection. Early growth of worms in HT115 protected neurons from degeneration during later growth in OP50. HT115 diet promoted the nuclear translocation of DAF-16 (ortholog of the FOXO family of transcription factors), a phenomenon previously reported to underlie neuroprotection caused by down-regulation of the insulin receptor in this system. Moreover, a daf-16 loss-of-function mutation abolishes HT115-driven neuroprotection. Comparative genomics, transcriptomics, and metabolomics approaches pinpointed the neurotransmitter γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and lactate as metabolites differentially produced between E. coli HT115 and OP50. HT115 mutant lacking glutamate decarboxylase enzyme genes (gad), which catalyze the conversion of GABA from glutamate, lost the ability to produce GABA and also to stop neurodegeneration. Moreover, in situ GABA supplementation or heterologous expression of glutamate decarboxylase in E. coli OP50 conferred neuroprotective activity to this strain. Specific C. elegans GABA transporters and receptors were required for full HT115-mediated neuroprotection. Additionally, lactate supplementation also increased anterior ventral microtubule (AVM) neuron survival in OP50. Together, these results demonstrate that bacterially produced GABA and other metabolites exert an effect of neuroprotection in the host, highlighting the role of neuroactive compounds of the diet in nervous system homeostasis.

Highlights

  • Intestinal microbes regulate many aspects of host physiology [1], including immune system maturation [2,3,4], neurodevelopment, and behavior [5,6,7], among others

  • We previously showed that mec-4d-expressing anterior ventral microtubule (AVM) touch neuron dies in a stereotyped fashion and defined the window of time when animals feed on the standard laboratory E. coli OP50 diet [16]

  • Neurodegeneration occurred with E. coli B, C. testosteroni, B. megaterium, and P. kiredjianiae to when feeding with E. coli OP50, the bacteria E. coli HT115, E. coli K-12, C. aquatica, P. aeruginosa, S. humi, and B. pumilus gave significant protection (Fig 1B)

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Summary

Introduction

Intestinal microbes regulate many aspects of host physiology [1], including immune system maturation [2,3,4], neurodevelopment, and behavior [5,6,7], among others. The bacterivore nematode Caenorhabditis elegans continues to provide an excellent model to study the relationship between bacteria and host [12]. Both the animal and its bacterial diet are genetically tractable, making them suitable for individual gene and large-scale mutation analysis. This system has been instrumental in deciphering specific metabolites from gut bacteria that influence developmental rate, fertility and aging [13], and host factors mediating germline maintenance in response to a variety of bacterial diets [14] as well as defensive behavioral strategies against pathogens [15]

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