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Publication | Open Access

A conserved bacterial genetic basis for commensal-host specificity

21

Citations

61

References

2024

Year

Abstract

Animals selectively acquire specific symbiotic gut bacteria from their environments that aid host fitness. To colonize, a symbiont must locate its niche and sustain growth within the gut. Adhesins are bacterial cell surface proteins that facilitate attachment to host tissues and are often virulence factors for opportunistic pathogens. However, the attachments are often transient and nonspecific, and additional mechanisms are required to sustain infection. In this work, we use live imaging of individual symbiotic bacterial cells colonizing the gut of living <i>Drosophila melanogaster</i> to show that <i>Lactiplantibacillus plantarum</i> specifically recognizes the fruit fly foregut as a distinct physical niche. <i>L. plantarum</i> establishes stably within its niche through host-specific adhesins encoded by genes carried on a colonization island. The adhesin binding domains are conserved throughout the Lactobacillales, and the island also encodes a secretion system widely conserved among commensal and pathogenic bacteria.

References

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