Immune Receptor Signaling and the Mushroom Body Mediate Post-ingestion Pathogen Avoidance

2020 | journal article; research paper

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​Immune Receptor Signaling and the Mushroom Body Mediate Post-ingestion Pathogen Avoidance​
Kobler, J. M.; Rodriguez Jimenez, F. J.; Petcu, I. & Grunwald Kadow, I. C.​ (2020) 
Current Biology30(23) pp. 4693.e3​-4709.e3​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2020.09.022 

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Attribution 4.0 CC BY 4.0

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Authors
Kobler, Johanna M.; Rodriguez Jimenez, Francisco J.; Petcu, Irina; Grunwald Kadow, Ilona C.
Abstract
In spite of the positive effects of bacteria on health, certain species are harmful, and therefore, animals must weigh nutritional benefits against negative post-ingestion consequences and adapt their behavior accordingly. Here, we use Drosophila to unravel how the immune system communicates with the brain, enabling avoidance of harmful foods. Using two different known fly pathogens, mildly pathogenic Erwinia carotovora (Ecc15) and highly virulent Pseudomonas entomophila (Pe), we analyzed preference behavior in naive flies and after ingestion of either of these pathogens. Although survival assays confirmed the harmful effect of pathogen ingestion, naive flies preferred the odor of either pathogen to air and also to harmless mutant bacteria, suggesting that flies are not innately repelled by these microbes. By contrast, feeding assays showed that, when given a choice between pathogenic and harmless bacteria, flies-after an initial period of indifference-shifted to a preference for the harmless strain, a behavior that lasted for several hours. Flies lacking synaptic output of the mushroom body (MB), the fly's brain center for associative memory formation, lost the ability to distinguish between pathogenic and harmless bacteria, suggesting this to be an adaptive behavior. Interestingly, this behavior relied on the immune receptors PGRP-LC and -LE and their presence in octopaminergic neurons. We postulate a model wherein pathogen ingestion triggers PGRP signaling in octopaminergic neurons, which in turn relay the information about the harmful food source directly or indirectly to the MB, where an appropriate behavioral output is generated.
Issue Date
2020
Journal
Current Biology 
Project
FOR 2705: Dissection of a Brain Circuit: Structure, Plasticity and Behavioral Function of the Drosophila Mushroom Body 
FOR 2705 | TP 3: Infection and behavior: The role of the mushroom body, AMPs and octopamine in brain-body communication 
Working Group
RG Kadow (Behavioral Neurogenetics) 
ISSN
0960-9822
eISSN
1879-0445
Language
English

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