Commensal microbiota-induced redox signaling activates proliferative signals in the intestinal stem cell microenvironment

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Abstract

A distinct taxon of the Drosophila microbiota, Lactobacillus plantarum, is capable of stimulating the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) within cells, and inducing epithelial cell proliferation. Here, we show that microbial-induced ROS generation within Drosophila larval stem cell compartments exhibits a distinct spatial distribution. Lactobacilli-induced ROS is strictly excluded from defined midgut compartments that harbor adultmidgut progenitor (AMP) cells, forming a functional ‘ROS sheltered zone’ (RSZ). The RSZ is undiscernible in germ-free larvae, but forms following monocolonization with L. plantarum. L. plantarum is a strong activator of the ROS-sensitive CncC/Nrf2 signaling pathway within enterocytes. Enterocyte-specific activation of CncC stimulated the proliferation of AMPs, which demonstrates that pro-proliferative signals are transduced from enterocytes to AMPs. Mechanistically, we show that the cytokine Upd2 is expressed in the gut following L. plantarum colonization in a CncC-dependent fashion, and may function in lactobacilli-induced AMP proliferation and intestinal tissue growth and development.

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Reedy, A. R., Luo, L., Neish, A. S., & Jones, R. M. (2019). Commensal microbiota-induced redox signaling activates proliferative signals in the intestinal stem cell microenvironment. Development (Cambridge), 146(3). https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.171520

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