Transmission of immune responses from one generation to the next represents a powerful adaptive mechanism to protect an organism's descendants. Parental infection by the natural C. elegans pathogen Pseudomonas vranovensis induces a protective response in progeny, but the bacterial cues and intergenerational signal driving this response were previously unknown. Here, we find that animals activate a protective stress response program upon exposure to P. vranovensis-derived cyanide and that a metabolic byproduct of cyanide detoxification, β-cyanoalanine, acts as an intergenerational signal to protect progeny from infection. Remarkably, this mechanism does not require direct parental infection; rather, exposure to pathogen-derived volatiles is sufficient to enhance the survival of the next generation, indicating that parental surveillance of environmental cues can activate a protective intergenerational response. Therefore, the mere perception of a pathogen-derived toxin, in this case cyanide, can protect an animal's progeny from future pathogenic challenges.
Perception of a pathogenic signature initiates intergenerational protection.
对致病特征的感知会启动代际保护
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作者:Pender Corinne L, Dishart Julian G, Gildea Holly K, Nauta Kelsie M, Page Emily M, Siddiqi Talha F, Cheung Shannon S, Joe Larry, Burton Nicholas O, Dillin Andrew
| 期刊: | Cell | 影响因子: | 42.500 |
| 时间: | 2025 | 起止号: | 2025 Feb 6; 188(3):594-605 |
| doi: | 10.1016/j.cell.2024.11.026 | ||
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