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
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.

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