Abstract

Microbial communities populate the mucosal surfaces of all animals. Metazoans have co-evolved with these microorganisms, forming symbioses that affect the molecular and cellular underpinnings of animal physiology. These microorganisms, collectively referred to as the microbiota, are found on many distinct body sites (including the skin, nasal cavity, and urogenital tract), however the most densely colonized host tissue is the intestinal tract. Although spatially confined within the intestinal lumen, the microbiota and associated products shape the development and function of the host immune system. Studies comparing gnotobiotic animals devoid of any microbes (germ free) with counterparts colonized with selected microbial communities have demonstrated that commensal microorganisms are required for the proper development and function of the immune system at homeostasis and following infectious challenge or injury. Animal model systems have been essential for defining microbiota-dependent shifts in innate immune cell function and intestinal physiology during infection and disease. In particular, the zebrafish has emerged as a powerful vertebrate model organism with unparalleled capacity for in vivo imaging, a full complement of genetic approaches, and facile methods to experimentally manipulate microbial communities. Here we review key insights afforded by the zebrafish into the impact of microbiota on innate immunity, including evidence that the perception of and response to the microbiota is evolutionarily conserved. We also highlight opportunities to strengthen the zebrafish model system, and to gain new insights into microbiota-innate immune interactions that would be difficult to achieve in mammalian models.

Highlights

  • Evolution of multicellular life on Earth has occurred in the presence of diverse microorganisms

  • The intestine of vertebrates is comprised of a single epithelial layer of intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) that forms a tube with a single continuous lumen allowing for the passage and absorption of dietary nutrients

  • Genetic tools, including myd88 mutants and pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) mutants, will provide key insights of the microbial signaling pathways that lead to innate immune responses mediated by commensal microbiota in zebrafish [35, 98]

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Summary

Introduction

Evolution of multicellular life on Earth has occurred in the presence of diverse microorganisms (e.g. bacteria, fungi, viruses, and protozoa). Studies in mice have reported microbiota-dependent host transcriptional responses in intestinal epithelia, including marked induction of genes encoding cytokines, chemokines, anti-microbial peptides, and other inflammatory mediators [17, 62, 67, 69, 95, 96].

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