4.8 Article

The chemistry of negotiation: Rhythmic, glycan-driven acidification in a symbiotic conversation

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1418580112

Keywords

symbiosis; squid-vibrio; metabolism; chitin

Funding

  1. NIH [RR12294/OD11024, AI050661]
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  3. Chemical Biology Training Program [University of Wisconsin (UW)-Madison, NIH-National Institute of General Medical Sciences] [T32 GM008505]
  4. Microbes in Health and Disease Training Program (UW-Madison NIH-National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases) [T32 AI055397]

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Glycans have emerged as critical determinants of immune maturation, microbial nutrition, and host health in diverse symbioses. In this study, we asked how cyclic delivery of a single host-derived glycan contributes to the dynamic stability of the mutualism between the squid Euprymna scolopes and its specific, bioluminescent symbiont, Vibrio fischeri. V. fischeri colonizes the crypts of a host organ that is used for behavioral light production. E. scolopes synthesizes the polymeric glycan chitin in macrophage-like immune cells called hemocytes. We show here that, just before dusk, hemocytes migrate from the vasculature into the symbiotic crypts, where they lyse and release particulate chitin, a behavior that is established only in the mature symbiosis. Diel transcriptional rhythms in both partners further indicate that the chitin is provided and metabolized only at night. A V. fischeri mutant defective in chitin catabolism was able to maintain a normal symbiont population level, but only until the symbiotic organ reached maturity (similar to 4 wk after colonization); this result provided a direct link between chitin utilization and symbiont persistence. Finally, catabolism of chitin by the symbionts was also specifically required for a periodic acidification of the adult crypts each night. This acidification, which increases the level of oxygen available to the symbionts, enhances their capacity to produce bioluminescence at night. We propose that other animal hosts may similarly regulate the activities of epithelium-associated microbial communities through the strategic provision of specific nutrients, whose catabolism modulates conditions like pH or anoxia in their symbionts' habitat.

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