| Literature DB >> 22154556 |
Margaret McFall-Ngai1, Elizabeth A C Heath-Heckman, Amani A Gillette, Suzanne M Peyer, Elizabeth A Harvie.
Abstract
Recent research on a wide variety of systems has demonstrated that animals generally coevolve with their microbial symbionts. Although such relationships are most often established anew each generation, the partners associate with fidelity, i.e., they form exclusive alliances within the context of rich communities of non-symbiotic environmental microbes. The mechanisms by which this exclusivity is achieved and maintained remain largely unknown. Studies of the model symbiosis between the Hawaiian squid Euprymna scolopes and the marine luminous bacterium Vibrio fischeri provide evidence that the interplay between evolutionarily conserved features of the innate immune system, most notably MAMP/PRR interactions, and a specific feature of this association, i.e., luminescence, are critical for development and maintenance of this association. As such, in this partnership and perhaps others, symbiotic exclusivity is mediated by the synergism between a general animal-microbe 'language' and a 'secret language' that is decipherable only by the specific partners involved. Copyright ÂEntities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22154556 PMCID: PMC3288948 DOI: 10.1016/j.smim.2011.11.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Semin Immunol ISSN: 1044-5323 Impact factor: 11.130