Host lipids regulate multicellular behavior of a predator of a human pathogen.
Ria Q KidnerEleanor B GoldstoneMartina R LaidemittMelissa C SanchezCatherine GerdtLorin P BrokawNúria Ros-RocherJamie MorrisW Sean DavidsonJoseph P GerdtPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
As symbionts of animals, microbial eukaryotes benefit and harm their hosts in myriad ways. A model microeukaryote ( Capsaspora owczarzaki ) is a symbiont of Biomphalaria glabrata snails and may prevent transmission of parasitic schistosomes from snails to humans. However, it is unclear which host factors determine Capsaspora' s ability to colonize snails. Here, we discovered that Capsaspora forms multicellular aggregates when exposed to snail hemolymph. We identified a molecular cue for aggregation: a hemolymph-derived phosphatidylcholine, which becomes elevated in schistosome-infected snails. Therefore, Capsaspora aggregation may be a response to the physiological state of its host, and it may determine its ability to colonize snails and exclude parasitic schistosomes. Furthermore, Capsaspora is an evolutionary model organism whose aggregation may be ancestral to animals. This discovery, that a prevalent lipid induces Capsaspora multicellularity, suggests that this aggregation phenotype may be ancient. Additionally, the specific lipid will be a useful tool for further aggregation studies.