Skip to main content
PLOS Pathogens logoLink to PLOS Pathogens
. 2024 Jan 17;20(1):e1011947. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1011947

Naturally-associated bacteria modulate Orsay virus infection of Caenorhabditis elegans

Rubén González 1,*, Marie-Anne Félix 1,*
Editor: Emily R Troemel2
PMCID: PMC10824439  PMID: 38232128

Abstract

Microbes associated with an organism can significantly modulate its susceptibility to viral infections, but our understanding of the influence of individual microbes remains limited. The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is a model organism that in nature inhabits environments rich in bacteria. Here, we examine the impact of 71 naturally associated bacteria on C. elegans susceptibility to its only known natural virus, the Orsay virus. Our findings reveal that viral infection of C. elegans is significantly influenced by monobacterial environments. Compared to an Escherichia coli environmental reference, the majority of tested bacteria reduced C. elegans susceptibility to viral infection. This reduction is not caused by virion degradation or poor animal nutrition by the bacteria. The repression of viral infection by the bacterial strains Chryseobacterium JUb44 and Sphingobacterium BIGb0172 does not require the RIG-I homolog DRH-1, which is known to activate antiviral responses such as RNA interference and transcriptional regulation. Our research highlights the necessity of considering natural biotic environments in viral infection studies and opens the way future research on host-microbe-virus interactions.

Author summary

Caenorhabditis elegans is a nematode roundworm that naturally inhabits decomposing vegetal matter—a bacteria-rich environment in which the animal feeds. The sampling of C. elegans in its natural habitats led to the discovery of its only known natural virus, the Orsay virus. This finding has potentiated virology research using C. elegans. However, most studies have been conducted using a laboratory bacterial environment. Here, we studied the effect of bacteria associated in nature with the nematodes on their susceptibility to Orsay virus infection. We tested a diverse set of bacteria, most of which come from regions where the Orsay virus is present. We found that most of these natural bacteria reduce susceptibility to infection compared to the reference laboratory bacterial environment. We studied some of the bacteria in depth and found that some can induce resistance to infection even in animals lacking the main antiviral immune responses. Our study highlights the key role that associated microbes play in host-virus interactions and underscores the importance of considering natural environments in research.

Introduction

The biotic environment of an organism influences many of its traits, including its immune responses [1]. In particular, microbes can influence interactions with pathogenic viruses [2]. In some cases, commensal and pathogenic microbes can enhance their host immunity and reduce viral replication and infectivity, thus providing protection against infection [36]. Conversely, some microbes can increase their host’s susceptibility to viral infections; some of them might even be crucial for new viruses to successfully infect their hosts [79]. To these intricate three-way interactions between host, virus, and microbes must be added the complex relationships among the individual microbes that form the associated microbial community. The study of simplified pathosystems and associated microbes would facilitate the understanding of these interactions and of host immunity to viral infections.

The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, widely used as a model organism [10], presents an ideal model system to study microbe–host interactions, which enabled insightful discoveries over the past 20 years [11]. One key feature of C. elegans for such studies is that it is possible to free the animals of associated microbes using a bleach treatment to which the embryos resist, and then reassociate them at will with one or several microbes.

The natural habitat of C. elegans is rotting fruit or other decomposing vegetal matter, which is rich in bacteria. These bacteria not only serve as a primary food source for the nematode but also constitute part of its biotic environment [12,13]. In the last decade, bacteria associated with C. elegans in its natural habitats have been characterized, revealing their presence in the nematode’s external environment, intestinal lumen, and as a fraction that is lysed and digested as food [1416]. In samples taken from Europe (specifically France and Spain), it was found that the most abundant phylum was Pseudomonadota (synonym: Proteobacteria, a group of Gram-negative bacteria). Other phyla such as Bacteroidota (synonym: Bacteroidetes, Gram-negative bacteria), Bacillota (synonym: Firmicutes, Gram-positive bacteria), and Actinomycetota (synonym: Actinobacteria, Gram-positive bacteria) were also identified. Furthermore, apple samples rich in Proteobacteria were observed to promote the proliferation of C. elegans [16]. Bacterial environments have been shown to affect C. elegans metabolism, signaling pathways, and immune responses [1720]. While associated bacteria can protect C. elegans from extracellular pathogens such as bacteria or fungi [2126], their effect in modulating interactions with intracellular pathogens, including viruses, remains unexplored.

The only known naturally occurring virus in C. elegans is the Orsay virus (OrV) [27]. The virus was first isolated from animals found on a rotting apple in Orsay, France [27]. OrV is a positive single-stranded RNA virus with a bipartite genome similar to that of Nodaviruses. This virus enters new hosts when C. elegans ingests the virions while feeding and, once inside the host intestinal lumen, it infects the intestinal cells. Infected intestinal cells release virions that are further transmitted horizontally to other individuals through the fecal-oral route. OrV infection affects host fitness by reducing and delaying reproduction [28]. C. elegans lacks immune components found in other animals, but is able to mount an immune response against viral infection [29]. Known mechanisms include the use of RNA interference (RNAi) and uridylation responses to target viral RNA for degradation, ubiquitin-mediated pathways that may target viral proteins for degradation, and transcriptional activation of specific genes in response to infection. This transcriptional response includes a specific immune response to C. elegans’s intestinal intracellular pathogens (i.e., microsporidia or viruses) known as the Intracellular Pathogen Response (IPR) [30]. The IPR involves the upregulation of a limited number of genes, including genes belonging to the pals gene family (whose biochemical function is currently unknown) and genes predicted to encode ubiquitin ligase components. The IPR is dependent on the helicase DRH-1, a RIG-I family member, which is likely a viral sensor and is also essential for the RNAi response. Downstream of DRH-1, the IPR is partially dependent on the transcription factor ZIP-1 [3133]. Severe infections trigger a general ‘biotic stress response’, which involves the upregulation of stress response genes (such as lys-3) [34]. Many mechanisms and components involved in the C. elegans immune response to Orsay virus are evolutionary conserved [31,32,34,35]. Therefore, studying these responses can provide valuable insights into virus-host interactions in other organisms.

In this study, we investigated the effect of bacterial environments on C. elegans susceptibility to OrV. We focused on monocultures of bacterial clones isolated from C. elegans natural habitats [1416,3638], which for short will be referred to as "natural bacteria", many of which were isolated in locations where the Orsay virus was also found. We primarily investigated bacterial strains from the phylum Pseudomonadota. Additionally, we studied bacterial strains from Bacillota, Bacteroidota, and Actinomycetota. Our objective was to determine whether the bacterial environment affects the nematode’s response to the virus and gain a deeper understanding of how specific bacterial strains may modulate host susceptibility to viruses. By investigating the interplay between C. elegans, its natural bacterial environment, and the Orsay virus, our study aims to provide novel insights into the role of the microbial context in modulating host-pathogen interactions and serve as a foundation for further studies with the potential to discover previously unknown viral defense mechanisms.

Results

Single bacterial environments modulate C. elegans susceptibility to viral infection

We examined the impact of 71 natural bacterial strains (S1 Table) on the susceptibility of C. elegans to OrV. For this initial screen, we used animals carrying the pals-5p::GFP reporter of intracellular infection [39]. We conducted the screen in five experimental blocks (S1 Fig), testing three populations of ≈100 animals per bacterial environment and including Escherichia coli OP50 in each block as the reference. We transferred axenic embryos to plates seeded with a single bacterial strain, inoculated the plate with OrV, and 72 hours post inoculation (hpi) scored the proportion of animals activating the pals-5 reporter with and without viral exposure. None of the bacteria triggered the pals-5 reporter activation in the absence of virus (S2 Fig). Based on the relative proportion of virus-inoculated animals in the population showing pals-5p::GFP activation compared to virus-inoculated populations on the E. coli OP50 reference (Fig 1, upper panel), we categorized the bacterial strains in three groups: 59 repressors of pals-5 reporter activation (significant lower activation than OP50), 5 enhancers (significant higher activation than OP50), and 7 bacteria with an effect similar to that of the E. coli environment. We tested some bacterial strains across different blocks, verifying that their effect on viral infections was reproducible (S3A Fig); all 6 bacteria with a relative rate higher than 1 were examined again within the same block, successfully replicating the observations of the initial screen (S3B Fig). For the bacteria in which no reporter activation was observed upon viral infection, we wondered whether the bacterial environments prevented pals-5 reporter activation under other types of stressing conditions, such as heat stress [30]. The pals-5 reporter could be activated by heat stress in these bacterial environments, showing that the suppression was specific to the response to viral infection (S1 Table).

Fig 1. Most naturally associated bacteria reduce C. elegans susceptibility to viral infection compared to E. coli OP50.

Fig 1

For each bacterial environment, three replicates of ca. 100 ERT54 animals were challenged with the Orsay virus JUv1580. The proportion of animals activating the pals-5p::GFP reporter was measured at 72 hpi (raw data are in S2 File). Data are plotted here as mean ± standard deviation between the three replicates, relative to the mean proportion on Escherichia OP50 measured on the same day. Significance was calculated using a general linear model with bacteria as a factor and Dunnett’s contrasts to compare all conditions against the Escherichia OP50 reference (bar highlighted in yellow). Bacterial strains that induce a significant (P < 0.05) reduction of pals-5p::GFP reporter activation are colored in red (darker red for those having a lower than 0.5 relative activation of pals-5), those with no significant differences with OP50 in grey, and those with significantly higher activation in blue. Bacteria are arranged according to their phylogenetic relationships, with taxonomic classifications provided in the top rows and a phylogenetic tree based on their 16S sequences in the bottom row. Bacterial strain names in blue indicate a significant phylogenetic signal for these strains. Bacterial strains marked with a grey dot were selected for further investigation.

Our screen included a phylogenetic diverse set of 71 bacterial strains (Fig 1). Using the Local Indicator of Phylogenetic Association (local Moran’s I test), we detected no phylogenetic signal for most strains, suggesting that the trait values are randomly distributed across the tree at this level of sampling. However, we identified a significant phylogenetic signal in Comamonas strains (P < 0.01), indicating a potential phylogenetic clustering for these three strains in triggering a particularly high C. elegans response to viral infection. We also note that all eleven tested members of Bacteroidota completely suppressed pals-5 expression upon OrV exposure.

In four cases, our screen included two distinct bacterial strains labeled with the same species name, indicating a particularly close relationship, and the different strains had similar effects (S4A Fig). We also tested various E. coli strains and found that despite some small but significant differences, all enabled a similar proportion of pals-5p::GFP reporter activation in virus-inoculated animals (S4B Fig).

In-depth characterization of selected bacteria

From this point onward, we focused on five randomly selected natural bacteria (indicated by grey dots in Fig 1): two enhancing pals-5p::GFP activation in virus-inoculated animals in the pals-5 screen and three suppressing it (S2 Fig). We directly stained viral RNA using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to assess more directly the effect of the bacterial environment on viral infection, and quantified the number of animals harboring virus-infected intestinal cells. On the enhancing Acinetobacter BIGb0102 and on the three suppressive bacteria, the viral FISH staining matched the result with the pals-5 reporter (Fig 2A and 2B). In the Comamonas BIGb0172 environment, the proportion of FISH-stained animals remained similar to that in OP50 (Fig 2A).

Fig 2. Focus on five bacterial strains confirms their modulation of C. elegans susceptibility to viral infection.

Fig 2

(A-B) Proportion of ERT54 animals showing pals-5p::GFP activation (left panel) or infected intestinal cells (stained by FISH against the virus; right panel), after OrV inoculation on bacteria that induced (A) strong activation or (B) no activation at 72 hpi of pals-5p::GFP in the initial screen, with Escherichia OP50 as a reference. Each bacterial strain is color-coded throughout this and following figures. The proportion of GFP positive animals was assayed on at least 100 animals in 2 independent experiments (different days) with 3 biological replicates per condition each. The two experiments are represented by triangles and circles, respectively. (C) Proportion of GFP-positive animals for three transcriptional reporters (pals-5, F26F2.1, and sdz-6), 72 hours post inoculation of Orsay virus in Acinetobacter BIGb0102 or Comamonas BIGb0172, assayed in three independent experiments, with three replicates of 100 animals each. Each experiment is represented by a distinct shape of the datapoints. (D) Viral load at 72 hpi, measured using RT-qPCR of viral RNA1, in parallel with pals-5p::GFP reporter activation measured in six biological replicates of 100 animals each (left panel). From these six populations, three pooled samples were created by combining two populations each. Data normalization was achieved using the copy number of the gene eft-2 as an endogenous reference (right). (E) Proportion of ERT54 animals at 72 hpi, showing pals-5p::GFP activation when challenged with different Orsay virus strains on different bacteria, done in three replicates of 100 animals each. (F) Proportion of infected C. briggsae JU1264 animals at 72 hpi inoculated with Santeuil virus strain JUv1264 on different bacteria, assayed using FISH against the virus. Three biological replicates were evaluated per experiment, with animals per datapoint. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Black symbols indicate the significance of the difference between the labeled bacteria and the Escherichia OP50 reference: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are labeled as “ns” (same symbols for all the figures of this study). Significance was calculated for panels 2A-B using a general linear-mixed model where the bacteria was the fixed factor and experiments a random effect; for panel 2C we used a general linear-mixed model with a Gamma distribution and a log-link function in which the bacteria was the fixed factor; Tukey contrasts were used for post hoc analyses. For panels 2D-F we used an analysis of variance with bacteria as a factor and Dunnett’s test for post hoc analyses.

We further tested on the two enhancing bacteria fluorescent reporters for the F26F2.1 or sdz-6 genes that are part of the IPR response but, unlike pals-5, are not controlled by the transcription factor ZIP-1 [33]. For Acinetobacter BIGb0102 we observed a similar pattern of gene activation for the F26F2.1 and sdz-6 reporters as for pals-5. However, in the Comamonas BIGb0172 environment, the F26F2.1 reporter but not sdz-6 was activated at a higher level than on OP50 upon viral infection (Fig 2C).

To assess the levels of viral replication within the animal population, we quantified viral loads using RT-qPCR, collecting the animals 72 h after embryos were placed on the virus-inoculated bacterial lawns. Compared to animals placed on OP50, those on the resistance-inducing bacteria showed a significant and strong (> 250-fold) reduction in RNA1 viral copies. Animals raised on Comamonas BIGb0172 showed an 18-fold reduction in viral load compared to those on OP50, and we did not detect significant differences among the viral levels reached on Escherichia OP50 and Acinetobacter BIGb0102 (Fig 2D).

We tested whether the effect of bacterial environments was specific to the conventional viral strain used in our main experiments (OrV strain JUv1580). We tested JUv2572, an OrV strain reported to be more infectious than JUv1580 and prone to infecting more anterior host intestinal cells [40]. Resistance-inducing bacteria also induced resistance upon inoculation by this viral strain (Fig 2E).

In conclusion, Chryseobacterium JUb44, Sphingobacterium BIG0116, and Lelliottia JUb276 strongly suppressed both viral infection of C. elegans and the downstream IPR response. Of the two tested bacteria that enhance the IPR response, Comamonas BIGb0172 results in a lower viral load compared to E. coli OP50, while the proportion of OrV-infected animals is increased on Acinetobacter BIGb0102.

Caenorhabditis briggsae, a species related to C. elegans and found in similar environments, is also naturally infected by noda-like RNA viruses [27,28]. We tested C. briggsae susceptibility to the Santeuil virus on Chryseobacterium JUb44 or Lelliottia JUb276, which suppress C. elegans infection by OrV. Interestingly, these two bacterial environments did not render C. briggsae resistant to the Santeuil virus, suggesting that their effect was specific of the C. elegans-OrV interaction (Fig 2F).

The impact of natural bacteria on C. elegans growth rate does not match their effect on viral infection

We wondered whether the bacteria affected OrV propagation by impacting C. elegans population and individual growth parameters. We tested the hypothesis of a correlation between C. elegans growth parameters on each bacterium and the susceptibility to viral infection.

First, as a proxy of population growth, we measured the production of offspring over time on each of the five bacteria and E. coli, in the absence of virus. Animals in the IPR enhancing Acinetobacter BIGb0102 had a significant increase in total brood size compared to Escherichia OP50 (Fig 3A), while Comamonas BIGb0172, Lelliottia JUb276, and Sphingobacterium BIGb0116 caused a significant decrease. Except for Acinetobacter BIGb0102, all bacterial environments significantly delayed the production of offspring compared to Escherichia OP50 (Fig 3A), that is, there was no significant difference between the resistant-inducing Chryseobacterium JUb44 and the permissive Comamonas BIGb0172.

Fig 3. Impact of selected bacteria on the fitness and developmental rates of C. elegans in the absence of viral infection.

Fig 3

(A) Upper panel shows total brood size of non-infected ERT54 animals when placed on each bacterial strain. Lower panels represent the daily production of viable progeny of non-infected ERT54 animals. Two separate experiments were conducted, in which the viable progeny of individual animals was monitored daily, with at least 5 individuals observed per bacterial type in each experiment. The upper panel represents the total progeny of those shown in the lower panels; the two experiments are represented by triangles and circles, respectively. (B) Proportion of adults assayed after exposing arrested axenic L1 larvae of the ERT54 strain to each bacterium, after 46 h (left panel) and after 62 h (right panel), in a population of 100 animals in each of three replicate populations per bacterial strain. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Black symbols on the graphs indicate the statistical significance of differences when compared to the Escherichia OP50 reference: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05. P-values exceeding 0.05 are labeled as “ns”. Significance was calculated for panel 3A using a linear-mixed model where the bacteria was the fixed factor with experiment as random effect; Tukey contrasts were used for post hoc analyses. For panels 3B we used an analysis of variance with bacteria as a factor and Dunnett’s test for post hoc analyses.

In addition, the natural bacterial environments significantly affected the individual developmental rate (Fig 3B). At 46 h after placing axenic arrested L1 larvae on Acinetobacter BIGb0102, the proportion of animals having reached adulthood was higher than those on OP50. The proportion of adults was lower with Comamonas BIGb0172, Lelliottia JUb276, Chryseobacterium JUb44, and Sphingobacterium BIGb0116. For the latter two, no adults were observed at this timepoint, while 16 h later in all environments the population was entirely composed of adults.

We thus conclude that the individual and population growth rates on the different bacteria do not match susceptibility to viral infection.

The effect of resistance-inducing bacteria prevails in mixed bacterial environments

We then wondered whether a suboptimal diet could be the cause of viral resistance. To test this hypothesis, we seeded plates with a mix of individual cultures of a resistance-inducing strain and Escherichia OP50. The three tested natural bacteria induced resistance even when initially seeded in a proportion of 10% (Fig 4A).

Fig 4. Prevalence in mixed bacterial environments of the suppressive effect of viral infection.

Fig 4

In all panels the infection was evaluated at 72 hpi. (A-F) Activation of pals-5p::GFP reporter or FISH staining of viral RNA2 (panel B) after OrV inoculation of ERT54: (A) on bacterial lawns seeded with dual combinations of resistance-inducing bacteria and OP50 in the indicated proportions (assayed in four replicates of 100 animals each); (B) on bacterial lawns seeded with a 80–20% combination of resistance-inducing bacteria and BIGb102, a bacterial strain permissive for viral infection (assayed in three replicates of 100 animals each); (C) on a lawn of resistance-inducing bacteria supplemented with OP50 (assayed in three replicates of 100 animals each); (D) on a lawn of resistance-inducing bacteria supplemented with BIGb102; (E) on a lawn of Escherichia OP50 supplemented with live or heat-killed cultures of resistance-inducing natural bacteria (assayed in two independent experiments, one with three replicates and the other with four replicates of 100 animals each—each experiment is represented by a distinct shape of the datapoints); (F) on Escherichia OP50 supplemented with resuspended pellet or filtered supernatant of resistance-inducing natural bacteria (assayed in four replicates of 100 animals each). In all panels, the top row shows a schematic representation of the experimental design. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Black symbols indicate the significance of the difference between the labeled bacteria and the Escherichia OP50 reference: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are labeled as “ns” (same symbols for all the figures of this study). In panels A-D and panel F significance was calculated using a general linear model where the factors were bacteria and treatment. In panel E significance was calculated using a general linear-mixed model, where the factors were the bacteria and the treatment, and the experiment was considered a random effect. In both cases Tukey contrasts were used for post hoc analyses.

This allowed us to further test whether the nematode’s growth rate mattered for the suppression of viral infection. Following [16], we mixed 20% of the permissive Acinetobacter BIGb0102 with 80% of suppressive bacteria that affected C. elegans growth rate and observed that developmental rates of the animals were restored (S5 Fig). However, the resistance to viral infection remained (Fig 4B).

Seeding plates with a mix of bacteria could cause potential interactions and competition between them. To minimize bacterial interaction, we (i) prepared plates with the suppressive natural bacteria and added permissive bacteria: Escherichia OP50 (Fig 4C) or Acinetobacter BIGb0102 and Comamonas BIGb0172 (Fig 4D), right before transferring axenic embryos and inoculating OrV or (ii) added suppressive natural bacteria onto Escherichia OP50 plates (Fig 4E and 4F). On these supplemented environments, Chryseobacterium JUb44, Sphingobacterium BIGb0116, and Lelliottia JUb276 induced resistance to infection. However, the induced OrV resistance was abolished if the suppressive natural bacteria were first heat-killed (Fig 4E) or when the filtered supernatant of live bacteria was added (Fig 4F).

The prevalence of resistance-inducing effects was also observed when testing the CeMbio community, a defined natural and ecologically relevant bacterial community [41]. Individual bacterial strains in the CeMbio community had diverse effects on susceptibility to infection. However, the animals were resistant to infection when associated with the CeMbio community (S6A Fig). Thus, bacterial-induced resistance prevails over permissive bacteria. These findings thus reject the poor diet hypothesis.

Suppression of viral infection is not explained by avoidance of the bacterial lawn

C. elegans avoids certain bacteria [42]. In our experiments, we applied the viral inoculum atop a bacterial lawn spotted in the center of the agar plate. We hypothesized that the animals may avoid this lawn, hindering virion uptake. To investigate this hypothesis, we analyzed the distribution of animals on plates spotted with a central bacterial lawn. The animals displayed no avoidance during the initial 48 hours. Beyond this period, the animals exhibited some aversion to the resistance-inducing Lelliottia JUb276 and to the susceptibility-inducing Acinetobacter BIGb0102. This behavior was observed in both mock and virus-inoculated plates (Fig 5A). These results indicate that the level of aversion to the bacteria did not match their effect on viral infection.

Fig 5. Aversion to the bacterial lawn does not explain the suppression of viral infection.

Fig 5

(A) Around 100 axenic arrested L1 larvae of the ERT54 strain were placed around different bacterial lawns that where mock-inoculated with M9 (upper panel) or inoculated with OrV JUv1580 (lower panel). The proportion of individuals occupying the bacterial lawn was visually counted at different timepoints. (B) Proportion of animals showing a transcriptional IPR response (pals-5p::GFP activation; left panel) or infected intestinal cells (stained by FISH against the virus; right panel) at 72 hpi in plates fully covered by bacteria and the JUv1580 virus inoculum. Three biological replicates were tested per bacteria and 100 animals from each were assayed. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Black symbols indicate the significance of the difference between the labeled bacteria and the Escherichia OP50 reference: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05. P-values greater than 0.05 are labeled as “ns”. Significance was calculated using an analysis of variance with bacteria as a factor and Dunnett’s test for post hoc analyses.

To further ensure that the avoidance of the viral inoculum was not responsible for the absence of infection on suppressive bacteria, we distributed both virus and bacteria on the whole surface of the agar. In this condition where the animals could not avoid exposure to the bacteria and the virus inoculum, bacterial strains JUb44, BIGb0116, and JUb276 still conferred viral resistance (Fig 5B).

Natural bacteria eliminate OrV from pre-infected C. elegans populations within two generations

In natural environments, viral infections spread within populations as infected organisms continuously produce and release viruses [43]. In order to create conditions where horizontal virus transmission must occur for the viral infection to be maintained, we transferred individuals from an infected C. elegans population, previously inoculated on Escherichia OP50, to the resistance-inducing bacterial environments (Fig 6A). The offspring of these animals had reduced activation of the pals-5p::GFP infection reporter and a lower proportion of infected individuals, compared to the control Escherichia OP50. At the second generation, viral infection was almost eliminated, except for the control (Figs 6B and S6B). Another experiment where the transfer was performed by transferring a piece of agar from the first plate to a new plate gave a similar result (S6C Fig).

Fig 6. Bacterial environments can suppress OrV persistence over generations.

Fig 6

(A) Schematic representation of the experimental design (detailed in methods). ERT54 animals carrying the pals-5p::GFP reporter were inoculated with OrV JUv1580 on E. coli OP50 and transferred to selected bacteria. (B) Activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter (upper panel) or proportion of infected animals (stained using FISH; lower panel) at two successive generations. Datapoints represent 100 animals, with three biological replicates per bacterial strain. The bar represents the mean ± standard error among replicates. Black symbols indicate the significance of the difference between the labeled bacteria and the Escherichia OP50 reference: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05. P-values greater than 0.05 are labeled as “ns”. Significance was calculated using a general linear model where bacteria and generation were the factors. Tukey contrasts were used for post hoc analyses.

Resistance-inducing bacteria act after the ingestion of virions

To examine whether the bacterial lawn affected virion infectivity prior to entering the host, we employed two approaches: (i) pre-incubating the virus with the bacteria before inoculation, and (ii) inoculating C. elegans with the virus on an Escherichia OP50 lawn and then transferring them to another bacterial environment.

In the first approach, we incubated the virus with either E. coli or the suppressive bacteria at 20°C for 24 h (Fig 7A). After incubation, bacteria were pelleted and the filtered viral supernatants were inoculated to animals on Escherichia OP50. We did not see a significant difference in the final infectivity of the viral preparations (Fig 7A). These results suggest that the bacteria do not induce resistance to infection by degrading the virions outside the host.

Fig 7. Suppressive bacterial environments act after ingestion of virus.

Fig 7

(A) Activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter in ERT54 animals on Escherichia OP50, challenged with viruses previously incubated with various bacterial cultures (detailed in Methods section “Coincubation of bacterial culture and virus inoculum”). Four replicate populations were evaluated per condition, with at least 100 animals assayed per population. Upper panel shows a schematic representation of the experimental design (detailed in Methods). (B) Proportion of GFP-positive ERT54 animals after initial exposure to the virus on Escherichia OP50 and subsequent transfer to different, non-virus-inoculated, bacteria. The upper panel shows a schematic representation of the experimental design (detailed in Methods section “Common garden inoculation experiment”). For the transcriptional response, three replicate populations were evaluated per condition and experiment. These three populations were pooled and the vRNA FISH stained to quantify the proportion of infected animals. Each data point represents a biological replicate, with at least 100 animals assayed per population. Independent experiments performed on different days are represented by the shape of the data point. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. "dpi" = days post-inoculation. Black symbols indicate the significance of the difference between the labeled bacteria and the Escherichia OP50 reference: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are labeled as “ns”. Significance was calculated for panel A using an analysis of variance with bacteria as a factor and Dunnett’s test for post hoc analyses and for panel B using a general linear-mixed model where bacteria was the fixed factor with experiments as random effect and Tukey contrasts for post hoc analyses.

In the second approach, we exposed axenic embryos to OrV for 24 h on Escherichia OP50 lawns and then transferred the larvae to plates with different bacterial lawns (Fig 7B). Note that in this experimental setup the animals acquire the virus in the same bacterial environment, thus pumping the virus at the same rate. We observed that natural bacteria can alter the pals-5p::GFP activation and infection susceptibility (proportion of infected animals), after initial virus exposure in a common susceptible environment (Fig 7B). These results indicate that the tested bacteria induce resistance after the ingestion of the virus into the intestinal lumen of the animal and that pumping rate is not a critical factor for the observed resistance.

Intact host antiviral pathways are not required for bacterial suppression of viral infection

We sought to identify host pathways required for the suppressive effect of bacteria on viral infection, testing animals carrying null alleles for key components of the antiviral response. A main axis of antiviral immunity starts with DRH-1/RIG-I triggering both the small RNA response and the transcriptional IPR (therefore lowering the ubiquitin-mediated immunity). As the IPR response is not activated in drh-1 mutants, we could not use pals-5p::GFP as the reporter and instead utilized a lys-3p::GFP reporter, which is activated upon severe infection [34]. Upon OrV inoculation, 75% of drh-1 animals activated the lys-3p::GFP reporter on Escherichia OP50 but very few to none did so on the 28 bacteria tested (Fig 8A). Thus, the suppression is mostly independent of DRH-1, a main node in the antiviral response.

Fig 8. Bacterial environments also suppress OrV infection in animals with hampered antiviral immune responses.

Fig 8

(A) Proportion of drh-1 animals that activate the lys-3p::GFP reporter after OrV inoculation on different viral resistance-inducing bacteria. (B-C) Proportion of infected animals, as assayed by RNA2 FISH, on two bacteria that enable slight activation of the reporter in panel A, for (B) wild-type and drh-1; (B) wild-type and rde-1 animals. (D-F) Proportion of infected animals, as assayed by RNA2 FISH, on the three selected suppressive bacteria for (D) wild-type, drh-1 and rde-1; (E) zip-1; (F) cde-1 animals. (G) Number of OrV-infected intestinal rings, as assayed by RNA2 FISH, in WT and drh-1 animals on the. In panels (A-F), three replicate populations were evaluated per condition. Each data point represents a replicate of at least 100 animals. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. In panel G three populations were pooled and 100 animals were evaluated. Black symbols indicate the significance of the difference between the labeled bacteria and the Escherichia OP50 reference meanwhile red symbols indicate the significance of differences between genotypes: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are labeled as “ns”. Significance was calculated using an analysis of variance with bacteria as a factor (Fig 8A, 8E, and 8F) or a general linear model where the factors were bacteria and host genotype (Fig 8B, 8C, and 8D). In both cases Tukey contrasts were used for post hoc analyses.

On three bacteria (Raoultella BIGb0399, Pseudomonas BIGb0477, and Acinetobacter MYb10), the activation of lys-3p::GFP was less strongly reduced (Fig 8A). We repeated the experiment using viral RNA FISH on two of the latter bacteria (Fig 8B and 8C) and the three suppressive bacteria studied above (Fig 8D and 8E).

On the Chryseobacterium JUb44 and Sphingobacterium BIGb0116, the virus could not infect the drh-1 mutant (Fig 6D), indicating that these bacteria do not require DRH-1 to repress OrV infection.

On the Pseudomonas BIGb0477, Acinetobacter MYb10, and Lelliottia JUb276 environments, the drh-1 animals showed a lower infection than on Escherichia OP50, but a significantly increased infection compared to the wild-type animals (Figs 8B, 8D, 8G and S6D). We confirmed the results for Lelliottia JUb276 using a drh-1 allele mimicking a natural deletion [31] (S6E Fig). Thus, even for these three bacteria, a suppressive effect is observed in the absence of drh-1, but the suppression is incomplete.

Downstream of DRH-1, we tested mutants in RDE-1, the Argonaute required for the RNAi interference response, and in the ZIP-1 transcription factor required for part of the DRH-1 dependent transcriptional IPR (Fig 8C, 8E and 8F). On these mutants, the suppressive bacteria, including Lelliottia JUb276, fully suppressed infection. Thus, the weak infection observed in drh-1 mutants on Lelliottia JUb276 does not seem to be RDE-1 or ZIP-1 dependent.

We further tested cde-1 mutants, which are defective in the viral uridylation response, and found that cde-1 mutants are resistant to viral infection on Chryseobacterium JUb44, Sphingobacterium BIGb0166, and Lelliottia JUb276 environments (Fig 8F).

Finally, we wondered if immune pathways against bacteria, such as p38/PMK-1, may be involved in the viral resistance induced by bacteria. We tested the susceptibility to viral infection of tir-1, tol-1, and pmk-1 mutants on Lelliottia JUb276. This bacterium induced resistance in all the mutants we tested (S7A and S7B Fig). In addition, we tested if the natural bacteria we studied in depth would activate a sysm-1 reporter, an element of the p38/PMK-1 pathway. None of the tested bacteria activated the reporter (S7C Fig).

In conclusion, for most suppressive bacteria, the reduction in viral infection is independent of known antiviral responses including small-RNA mediated RNA degradation and transcriptional regulation downstream of DRH-1, and uridylation. However, Pseudomonas BIGb0477, Acinetobacter MYb10, and Lelliottia JUb276 fail to induce full resistance to viral infection when DRH-1 is not functional.

Discussion

We conducted a comprehensive survey of the impact of 71 bacteria naturally associated bacteria with C. elegans on its susceptibility to viral infections. Our screen revealed that monobacterial environments significantly influence host susceptibility to viral infections, with some bacteria providing protective effects, while others are permissive of viral infections. Notably, in our screen, the majority of the tested natural bacteria tested reduced host susceptibility to viral infection compared to the E. coli OP50 environment commonly used in laboratories. However, when we tested two of these suppressive bacteria on the infection of C. briggsae by its Santeuil virus, they did not induce resistance, suggesting specificity in interaction either with the host, the virus or both. Overall, our results highlight the importance of considering the laboratory microbial environment when isolating wild animal strains for the study of their viruses.

Host-microbe interactions include possible trade-offs for the host between the induced viral resistance and the effect of the bacteria on the host, regardless of virus presence [44]. We found that the BIGb0116 and JUb276 bacterial strains may confer protection against viral infections while simultaneously reducing exponential growth parameters of host populations in the absence of virus. In the five natural bacterial environments we tested in depth, except for BIGb0102, animals spend more time in their larval stage due to delayed development and the populations thus grow more slowly. The developmental delay does not seem to explain the resistance to infection, as all four C. elegans larval stages are susceptible to infection, as has been shown for the JU1580 [45] and N2 [46] strain. Most convincingly we observed that the resistance to viral infections is maintained in mixed bacterial environments that restore the animal development rates.

Host nutrition can have diverse effects in pathogens [47]. We have grown C. elegans in different bacterial environments and it is important to remark that for this nematode there is no distinction between food (nutrition) and biotic environment. Our experiments suggest that the resistance to virus infection is not caused by nutritional deficits because supplementation with bacteria that enable virus infection does not recover susceptibility to the virus. Supplementation of C. elegans with chemicals has been shown to restore viral susceptibility on resistant genotypes; mutants with disturbed lipid metabolism restore susceptibility to infection after being supplemented with certain lipids [48]. Some bacterial strains have been shown to possess immunomodulatory properties even after being heat-killed [49]. Our tested bacteria do not induce resistance after being heat-killed, indicating that either the bacteria need to be alive to induce resistance or that the bacterial factor that induces resistance is thermolabile. We conclude that the influence of natural bacteria on C. elegans susceptibility to virus is beyond nutritional content. This observation aligns with observations made for other physiological phenotypes of the nematode [16].

We found that some bacteria can induce resistance to infection without requiring known host antiviral mechanisms. Some bacteria fail to induce full resistance in drh-1 null mutants but could induce it in mutants of factors acting downstream of DRH-1. DRH-1 recognizes the viral genome as foreign, possibly through its well-conserved RIG-I domain [31], and activates multiple immune responses and transcription of genes of unknown function. Our findings suggest that either some bacteria fail to induce resistance in the highly susceptible drh-1 mutants or that the bacteria instigate resistance partially through DRH-1, via an unknown downstream pathway. It is also possible that rather than through DRH-1 mediated activation of antiviral pathways, the suppression operates because viral RNA does not enter the intestinal cells on suppressive bacteria, or that the cells are not competent for some part of the lifecycle of the virus, such as replication, translation or packaging.

Our research emphasizes the importance of considering the natural biotic environment in the study of viral infections and their ecological and evolutionary implications [50,51]. Our work is consistent with a recent study by Vassallo and colleagues that reported that Pseudomonas lurida and Pseudomonas aeruginosa attenuate Orsay virus transmission and infection rates. This attenuation depends on bacterial regulators of quorum sensing [52]. Our study provides a valuable foundation for future research by suggesting the involvement of unknown antiviral mechanisms and by establishing a basis for dissecting the molecular mechanisms underlying host-virus interactions accounting for the biotic environment. Future research should aim to uncover the molecular mechanisms underlying these protective effects and explore their applicability to a broader range of viral strains and host species. This understanding may aid in discovering new immune mechanisms and improving host health through targeted manipulation of the microbes associated with an organism.

Material and methods

Animal strains and maintenance

C. elegans was cultured on Nematode Growth Media (NGM) plates at 20°C, following standard procedures [53,54]. C. briggsae was cultured at 23°C. The NGM plates were seeded with 100 μL of a monobacterial culture and kept at room temperature for two days before being stored at 4°C. All experiments were performed using seeded plates stored for less than 3 weeks. The nematode strains used in this study are listed in S2 Table.

The drh-1(mcp553) allele mimics the natural deletion in JU1580 and other C. elegans wild isolates [31]. It was created using a CRISPR/Cas9-mediated edition in the N2 background by the CNRS Segicel Platform (Lyon, France) using two guides crMG023 (gCTATCGTGTTGCTAGTCGA)and crMG024 (ACCGACCGAAATACGACAAT) and the repair template (tctttacatgcttattttatttaattcttaattctattaattatttaattttcagctatc AATGAGAGATGCGGATCAAGCTCGAACACCAATGGTATTTGAGCATCACGCGAATGGAGA). The primers used to confirm the deletions were AAACTCGCCTGACGGATGAG, TTGGAACTGAGCGATTGGCA, and TCGGTACCTTCGACTAGCAAC.

The JU4289 strain with the agIs219[sysm-1p::GFP + ttx-3p::GFP] transgene in the N2 background was obtained by crossing ZD39 hermaphrodites [agIs219 [sysm-1p::GFP + ttx-3p::GFP] III; pmk-1(km25) IV] to N2 males, then F1 males to N2 and selecting a GFP-positive animal.

Bacterial maintenance

Bacteria were cryo-preserved at -80°C in Luria broth medium (LB; 10 g/L tryptone, 5 g/L yeast extract, 5 g/L NaCl) with 25% glycerol. For cultivation, a cryo-preserved culture was streaked on LB-agar plates and incubated at room temperature for 48 h. Colonies were then picked and inoculated into 5 mL of liquid LB. The culture was grown at 28°C and 220 rpm for 16 h for the naturally-associated bacterial strains, while E. coli OP50 was grown at 37°C. The bacterial strains used in this study are listed in S1 Table.

Preparation of viral inoculum

The Orsay virus strain JUv1580 [27] was used in all experiments except when the Orsay virus strain JUv2572 [40] or the Santeuil virus JUv1264 [27] were used, as indicated. Viral preparations of JUv1580 were obtained by inoculating a viral filtrate derived from the original JU1580 infected animals [27] on 90 mm OP50-seeded plates with JU2624 animals (C. elegans JU1580 isolate in which the lys-3p::GFP construct was introgressed by 10 rounds of backcrosses to JU1580; 34). The animals were collected with M9 buffer four days after inoculation, pelleted, and the supernatant was filtered through a 0.22 μm filter to obtain the OrV-infectious supernatant. The supernatant was aliquoted and cryo-preserved at -80°C and the required amount was freshly thawed at each experiment.

Virus inoculation procedure

To synchronize the nematode population and obtain axenic animals, we treated young adult populations with 4 mL of a bleach solution (2 mL sodium hypochlorite 12%, 1.25 mL NaOH 10 N, 6.75 mL H2O) for three minutes. We then washed the samples four times with 15 mL of M9 buffer. This procedure resulted in axenic embryos, which were placed around the bacterial lawn previously inoculated with 50 μL of the viral inoculum. The inoculated plates with animals were maintained at 20°C, and infection was assessed 72 hours post-inoculation (hpi).

Fluorescent reporters for viral infection

Animals were observed using a Leica MZ FLIII fluorescence stereomicroscope at 6x magnification. An animal was visually classified as positive when GFP fluorescence was observed in intestinal cells at higher levels than background. The GFP signal was scored as a binary trait, quantified over the population of animals. The activation of the intracellular pathogen response was measured using fluorescent reporters activated upon intracellular infection (pals-5p::GFP, F26F2.1p::GFP, or sdz-6p::GFP; 33,34,39). In the genetic background drh-1, a reporter of severe biotic stress (lys-3p::GFP) was used, as drh-1 animals do not induce pals-5 expression.

Fluorescent in situ hybridization

The proportion of infected animals was quantified by visualizing viral RNA in the host intestinal cells. Viral RNA was labeled using fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), as described by Frézal and colleagues [40]. In brief, animals were collected and fixed in a 10% formamide solution. Fixed animals were stained targeting OrV RNA2 molecules using a 1:40 dilution of a mix of oligonucleotide sequences [40,55] conjugated to the Cal Fluor red 610 fluorophore or a non-diluted single probe (5’ ACC ATG CGA GCA TTC TGA ACG TCA 3’) conjugated to Texas Red. To stain the Santeuil virus we targeted its RNA1 molecules using a 1:40 dilution of a mix of oligonucleotide sequences [40] conjugated to the Cal Fluor red 610 fluorophore. Animals were then examined using an AxioImager M1 (Zeiss) compound microscope with 10× (0.3 numerical aperture) and 40× (1.3 numerical aperture) objectives. An animal was considered infected if at least one intestinal cell displayed distinct fluorescence at higher levels than the background staining for this individual.

RNA extraction

RNA was isolated following an acid guanidinium thiocyanate-phenol-chloroform extraction protocol [56]. A 100 μl C. elegans pellet was resuspended in 500 μl of Trizol, and the suspension was subjected to 5 freeze-thaw cycles. The suspension was then vortexed for 30 seconds, allowed to rest for an equal duration, and this vortex-rest sequence was performed five times. 100 μl of chloroform were then added. Tubes were shaken vigorously by hand for 15 seconds and left to stand at room temperature for 2–3 minutes. Following incubation, the mix was centrifuged for 15 minutes at 13000 rpm at a temperature of 4°C. The upper aqueous phase was transferred to a new tube, where 250 μl of isopropanol was added, mixed, and allowed to incubate at room temperature for 10 minutes. A subsequent centrifugation was performed under the same conditions. The resulting supernatant was discarded, and the pellet was washed using 500 μl of 75% ethanol. This mix was then vortexed and centrifuged for 5 minutes at 13,000 rpm at 4°C. After discarding the supernatant, the pellet was air-dried for 10 minutes and dissolved in 50 μl of RNAse-free water.

Measurement of viral loads

cDNA was generated from 500 ng of total RNA with random primers using cDNA that was synthesized with SuperScript IV Reverse Transcriptase (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA), following manufacturer’s instructions. cDNA was diluted to 1:10 for RT-qPCR analysis. RT-qPCR was performed using LightCycler 480 SYBR Green I Master (Roche, Mannheim, Germany), following manufacturer’s instructions. The amplification was performed on a LightCycler 480 Real Time PCR System (Roche). In each sample the viral RNA1 (primers GW194: 5′ ACCTCACAACTGCCATCTACA and GW195: 5′ GACGCTTCCAAGATTGGTATTGGT, 27) levels were measured and normalized to its corresponding levels of the endogenous gene eft-2 (etf-2 2F 5′ CTGCCCGTCGTGTGTTCTAC and etf-2 2R 5′ TCCTCGAAAACGTGTCCTCTT).

Mixed bacterial environment experiments

The following two approaches were taken to mix bacteria. (i) For Fig 4A and 4B: volumes of liquid bacterial cultures of suppressive and permissive strains were mixed according to the proportions indicated in the figures, and 100 μL of the mixture were seeded on NGM plates. These plates were maintained at room temperature for two days before being stored at 4°C until use. Plates were utilized within three weeks and acclimated at room temperature for a few hours before the start of the experiment. (ii) For Fig 4C to 4F: 30 minutes before initiating the experiment, we added 100 μL of bacterial culture (prepared as described in “Bacterial maintenance”) atop the bacterial lawn of plates seeded with a monobacterial lawn (prepared as described in “Animal strains and maintenance”). Specifically, in Fig 4E a heat-killed culture was added to the seeded plates. Bacteria were heat-killed by incubating the bacterial cultures in a water-bath at 100°C for 40 min. The effectiveness of the heat-killing process was confirmed by plating 100 μL of the heat-killed culture onto an LB plate and observing no growth after overnight incubation at 37°C. In Fig 4F, we pelleted 5 mL of a liquid bacterial culture by centrifuging it for 10 minutes at 5000 rpm. The supernatant was collected and filtered through a 0.22 μm filter. Subsequently, 100 μL of the filtered supernatant was added atop a monobacterial lawn. The pellet was resuspended in 5 mL of LB and 100 μL of the resuspended pellet was added on the top of a monobacterial lawn, as indicated in the x axis of the figure).

Experiments assaying OrV persistence over generations

We initiated these experiments with ERT54 animal populations infected with OrV, as indicated by the presence of pals-5p:GFP positive individuals. The infection in these populations was initiated by inoculating OrV on OP50-seeded plates containing axenic embryos. To maintain these infected populations, a 7 mm x 7 mm agar piece was chunked to fresh OP50-seeded plates. This transfer procedure was performed 2–3 times before starting experiments. From these plates, we selected 10 random L4 stage animals and placed them on plates seeded with either a natural bacterial strain or OP50 as a control. After a 96-hour period, we assayed infection in the offspring of these 10 animals, designated as Generation 1, by examining 100 young adults. We then repeated the process, picking another 10 random L4 larvae from Generation 1 and moving them to new plates seeded with the same bacteria as their respective parents. After 96 h, we assessed the Generation 2 offspring for infection, again examining 100 young adults.

Fig 6 illustrates this experiment, assessing infection via the pals-5p::GFP reporter and FISH staining of vRNA. S6B Fig replicates the experiment but relies solely on the pals-5p::GFP reporter for evaluating infection. S6C Fig shows a variation of the experiment where, instead of transferring 10 L4 animals, a 7 mm x 7 mm agar piece containing a random assortment of animals at various stages was transferred to new plates, and only the pals-5p::GFP reporter was assayed in Generation 2.

Co-incubation of bacterial culture and virus inoculum

In Fig 7A we mixed 1 mL of liquid bacterial culture (bacterial strain indicated in the x axis of the figure, culture prepared as described in “Bacterial maintenance”) with 1 mL of virus inoculum (prepared as described in “Virus maintenance”). This 1:1 mixture was incubated for 24 h at 20°C. After the incubation time, the tubes were centrifuged for 10 minutes at 5000 rpm and the supernatant was collected and passed through a 0.22 μm filter. We used 120 μL of the filtered supernatant to inoculate OP50-seeded plates. Axenic embryos were placed onto these plates, incubated at 20°C, and pals-5p::GFP activation was measured 72 hpi.

Common garden inoculation experiment

In Fig 7B, we placed axenic ERT54 embryos on 90-mm plates seeded with OP50. These plates were then inoculated with 300 μL of virus inoculum, and animals were then maintained at 20°C for 24 h to enable virion intake. After these 24 h, animals were collected in M9 buffer and washed three times in 15 mL of M9 buffer. Washed animals were then split and transferred to non-virus inoculated plates seeded with the different bacterial strains indicated on the x-axis. The infection status of the animals was evaluated 48 h after being transferred to the new plates.

Phylogenetic analysis

The bacterial 16S rDNA sequences used in the phylogenetic analysis can be found in S1 File. A multiple sequence alignment was performed using the MAFFT v7 tool [57] of MPI Bioinformatics Toolkit [58]. Aligned sequences were used to infer the phylogenetic tree by maximum likelihood using the IQ-TREE web server [59]. The phylogenetic tree and the plot of the Fig 1 were generated using the phylo4d function from the “phylosignal” package version 1.3 [60]. The phylogenetic signal in the trait data was assessed using the lipaMoran function, also available in the “phylosignal” package. To account for multiple testing, we adjusted the obtained P-values using the Benjamini-Hochberg method. The level of significance was set at P < 0.01.

Statistical analysis

All statistical analyses were conducted using R version 3.6.1 within the Rstudio development environment version 1.3.1093. The level of significance was set at P < 0.05. The specific statistical methods applied to each figure are detailed in the legend of the corresponding figure.

The analysis of variance, Tukey or Dunnett’s post hoc test, and letter-based grouping for multiple comparisons were performed using the following functions: (i) the aov() function from the “stats” package version 3.6.1 [61] was used for conducting the ANOVA (ii) the TukeyHSD() function from the ’stats’ package was used for performing the Tukey post hoc test (iii) Dunnett’s post hoc test was carried out using the glht() function from the “multcomp” package version 1.4–23 [62] (iv) the multcompLetters4 function from the “multcompView” package version 0.1.8 [63] was used for generating letter-based grouping for multiple comparisons. General linear models were performed using the glm function from the “stats” package. To account for the block effect, we employed linear mixed-effects or general linear mixed-effects models. The models were fitted to the data using the lmer or the glmer function from the “lme4” package version 1.1–21 [64]. Post hoc pairwise comparisons were performed using the emmeans function from the “emmeans” package version 1.4.7 [65]. Tukey’s method was used to adjust for multiple comparisons in the pairwise comparisons.

Graphs were generated using the “ggpubr” package version 0.2.4 [66] in R.

Supporting information

S1 Fig. Proportion of animals with activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter after Orsay virus inoculation on different bacteria.

Original data used in Fig 1, including here the experimental block structure. For each bacterial environment, three replicates of ca. 100 ERT54 animals were challenged with the OrV JUv1580. The proportion of animals activating the pals-5p::GFP reporter was measured 72 hpi. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Letters over the bars indicate letter-based grouping for multiple comparisons. The yellow bar indicates E. coli OP50.

(TIF)

S2 Fig. Fluorescence microscopy of ERT54 [pals-5p::GFP; myo-2p::mCherry] animals that were mock- or virus-inoculated in different bacterial environments.

Animals mock-inoculated with M9 or inoculated with OrV JUv1580 were visualized at 72 hpi using a 10x objective mounted on AxioImager M1 (Zeiss) compound microscope and images were captured with a PIXIS 1024 (Princeton instruments) camera. Scale bar represents 100 μm. GFP-positive animals can be seen in the intestinal cells of virus-inoculated animals on the three bacteria on top. Note that a less intense fluorescence can be seen in the posterior intestinal cells of animals in both mock- and virus-inoculated populations, especially in JUb44 environments. This posterior intestinal fluorescence is also observed in uninfected animals grown in OP50 [39]. We hypothesize that this fluorescence is caused by the 3’UTR of unc-54 used in plasmids that generated the ERT54 strain. This DNA fragment probably contains cis-regulatory sites for the adjacent gene, aex-5, expressed in posterior intestinal cells as mentioned in [67].

(TIF)

S3 Fig. Replication of some experiments shown in Fig 1.

(A) The impact of bacterial strains on viral infection of ERT54 nematodes is consistent across experimental blocks (performed on different days). (B) New experiment with the bacteria that enhanced infection on the initial screening shown in Fig 1. Each data point represents a biological replicate, with 100 animals assayed per population. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Asterisks on the graphs represent values of significance: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are not labeled. Significance was calculated using a general linear model with bacteria as a factor and Dunnett’s contrasts to compare all conditions against the Escherichia OP50 reference.

(TIF)

S4 Fig. Test of several strains of selected bacterial species.

(A) Activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter upon viral infection of ERT54 animals on different strains of the same bacterial species. (B) Activation of pals-5p::GFP reporter upon viral infection of animals on different E. coli strains. Each data point represents a biological replicate, with 100 animals assayed per population. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Asterisks on the graphs represent values of significance: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are not labeled. Significance was calculated using a general linear model with bacteria as a factor and Dunnett’s contrasts to compare all conditions against the Escherichia OP50 reference.

(TIF)

S5 Fig. Developmental growth rate of C. elegans on mixed bacterial environments.

Arrested axenic L1 larvae of the ERT54 strain were exposed to each monobacterial environment or to mixed environments composed of 20% of BIGb0102 and 80% of another bacterium (indicated in the x axis). The proportion of adults of 3 independent populations (100 animals per population) per environmental condition was observed after 46 and 62 h.

(TIF)

S6 Fig. New experiments to confirm results.

(A) Activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter upon OrV infection of animals on different single CeMbio strains and the whole CeMbio community. (B) Repetition of experiment shown in Fig 6, but only evaluating the activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter. (C) Repetition of experiment shown in Fig 6, using a transfer of an agar chunk after 2 generations (detailed in methods). (D) Repetition of experiments, testing drh-1 animals, shown in Fig 8D. (E) Susceptibility to viral infection on Lelliottia JUb276 of animals carrying a natural deletion allele of drh-1. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Black symbols indicate the significance of the difference between the labeled bacteria and the Escherichia OP50 reference, while red symbols indicate the significance of differences between genotypes: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are labeled as “ns”. Significance was calculated using an analysis of variance with bacteria as a factor (Panels A,C,D), a general linear model where the factors were bacteria and generations (Panel D), or a general linear model where the factors were bacteria and host genotype (Panel E). In both cases Tukey contrasts were used for post hoc analyses.

(TIF)

S7 Fig. Natural bacteria and anti-bacterial immune pathways.

(A) Experiment testing, on Escherichia OP50 or Lelliottia JUb276, virus susceptibility of mutants with alterations in different genes involved in the response against bacterial infections. We tested three biological replicates per genotype, with 100 animals assayed per population. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. (B) Experiment testing, on Escherichia OP50 or Lelliottia JUb276, virus susceptibility of tir-1 mutants. We tested three biological replicates per genotype, with 100 animals assayed per population. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. (C) Fluorescence microscopy of the sysm-1p::GFP reporter. JU4289 animals carry the agsl219[sysm-1p::GFP + ttx-3p::GFP] transgene. Three day-old JU4289 animals grown at 20°C in the indicated bacterial environment were observed using a 10x objective on an AxioImager M1 (Zeiss) compound microscope. The Cherry and GFP fluorescence channels were captured with a PIXIS 1024 (Princeton instruments) camera and overlaid. PA14 and DB11 bacterial environments serve as positive control for the reporter activation. Scale bar represents 100 μm.

(TIF)

S1 Table. List of bacterial strains used in this work.

The pals-5p::GFP column indicates that C. elegans is able to activate the pals-5p::GFP reporter on the tested strains after heat shock. For this test, 48 hours-old ERT54 animals were placed at 30°C for 24 h, being observed right after the 24 h heat shock. FR is an abbreviation for France, GER for Germany, and USA for United States of America.

(DOCX)

S2 Table. Nematode strains used in this study.

(DOCX)

S1 File. 16S rDNA sequences used for the phylogenetic analysis of the natural bacteria.

(TXT)

S2 File. Data generated in this study.

(XLSX)

Acknowledgments

We thank Aurélien Richaud for excellent technical assistance and advice and Tony Bélicard for the JU2624 strain. We wish to thank Emily Troemel for sharing the zip-1(jy13) strain. Some strains were provided by the CGC, which is funded by NIH Office of Research Infrastructure Programs (P40 OD010440). We thank the CNRS Segicel platform for generating the drh-1(mcp553) strain. We thank WormBase. We also thank members of Marie-Anne Félix, Marie Gendrel, and Henrique Teotónio’s teams for fruitful discussions.

Data Availability

All relevant data are within the manuscript and its Supporting information files.

Funding Statement

R.G. is funded by an EMBO Postdoctoral Fellowship (ALTF 311-2021). M.A.F. is funded by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. This work was partially funded through a grant from the Agence Nationale de la Recherche ANR-19-CE12-0025. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

References

  • 1.Leulier F., MacNeil L.T., Lee W., Rawls J.F., Cani P.D., Schwarzer M., Zhao L., and Simpson S.J. (2017). Integrative Physiology: At the Crossroads of Nutrition, Microbiota, Animal Physiology, and Human Health. Cell Metabolism 25, 522–534. doi: 10.1016/j.cmet.2017.02.001 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 2.González R., and Elena S.F. (2021). The Interplay between the Host Microbiome and Pathogenic Viral Infections. mBio 12, e02496–21. doi: 10.1128/mBio.02496-21 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 3.Belkacem N., Serafini N., Wheeler R., Derrien M., Boucinha L., Couesnon A., Cerf-Bensussan N., Gomperts Boneca I., Di Santo J.P., Taha M.-K., et al. (2017). Lactobacillus paracasei feeding improves immune control of influenza infection in mice. PloS ONE 12, e0184976. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184976 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 4.Fonseca W., Lucey K., Jang S., Fujimura K.E., Rasky A., Ting H.-A., Petersen J., Johnson C.C., Boushey H.A., Zoratti E., et al. (2017). Lactobacillus johnsonii supplementation attenuates respiratory viral infection via metabolic reprogramming and immune cell modulation. Mucosal Immunol 10, 1569–1580. doi: 10.1038/mi.2017.13 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 5.Kim H.J., Jo A., Jeon Y.J., An S., Lee K.-M., Yoon S.S., and Choi J.Y. (2019). Nasal commensal Staphylococcus epidermidis enhances interferon-λ-dependent immunity against influenza virus. Microbiome 7, 80. doi: 10.1186/s40168-019-0691-9 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 6.Stefan K.L., Kim M.V., Iwasaki A., and Kasper D.L. (2020). Commensal Microbiota Modulation of Natural Resistance to Virus Infection. Cell 183, 1312–1324.e10. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.10.047 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 7.Kuss S.K., Best G.T., Etheredge C.A., Pruijssers A.J., Frierson J.M., Hooper L.V., Dermody T.S., and Pfeiffer J.K. (2011). Intestinal Microbiota Promote Enteric Virus Replication and Systemic Pathogenesis. Science 334, 249–252. doi: 10.1126/science.1211057 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 8.Robinson C.M., Jesudhasan P.R., and Pfeiffer J.K. (2014). Bacterial Lipopolysaccharide Binding Enhances Virion Stability and Promotes Environmental Fitness of an Enteric Virus. Cell Host Microbe 15, 36–46. doi: 10.1016/j.chom.2013.12.004 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 9.Domínguez-Díaz C., García-Orozco A., Riera-Leal A., Padilla-Arellano J.R., and Fafutis-Morris M. (2019). Microbiota and Its Role on Viral Evasion: Is It With Us or Against Us? Front Cell Infect Microbiol 9, 256. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2019.00256 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 10.Davis P, Zarowiecki M, Arnaboldi V, Becerra A, Cain S, Chan J, et al. (2022) WormBase in 2022—data, processes, and tools for analyzing Caenorhabditis elegans. Walhout M, editor. Genetics 220, iyac003. doi: 10.1093/genetics/iyac003 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 11.Backes C., Martinez-Martinez D., and Cabreiro F. (2021). C. elegans: A biosensor for host–microbe interactions. Lab Anim 50, 127–135. doi: 10.1038/s41684-021-00724-z [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 12.Frézal L., and Félix M.-A. (2015). C. elegans outside the Petri dish. eLife 4, e05849. doi: 10.7554/eLife.05849 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 13.Schulenburg H., and Félix M.-A. (2017). The Natural Biotic Environment of Caenorhabditis elegans. Genetics 206, 55–86. doi: 10.1534/genetics.116.195511 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 14.Berg M., Stenuit B., Ho J., Wang A., Parke C., Knight M., Alvarez-Cohen L., and Shapira M. (2016). Assembly of the Caenorhabditis elegans gut microbiota from diverse soil microbial environments. ISME J 10, 1998–2009. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2015.253 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 15.Dirksen P., Marsh S.A., Braker I., Heitland N., Wagner S., Nakad R., Mader S., Petersen C., Kowallik V., Rosenstiel P., et al. (2016). The native microbiome of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans: gateway to a new host-microbiome model. BMC Biol 14, 38. doi: 10.1186/s12915-016-0258-1 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 16.Samuel B.S., Rowedder H., Braendle C., Félix M.-A., and Ruvkun G. (2016). Caenorhabditis elegans responses to bacteria from its natural habitats. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 113, E3941–E3949. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1607183113 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 17.Coolon J.D., Jones K.L., Todd T.C., Carr B.C., and Herman M.A. (2009). Caenorhabditis elegans Genomic Response to Soil Bacteria Predicts Environment-Specific Genetic Effects on Life History Traits. PloS Genet 5, e1000503. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000503 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 18.Cabreiro F., and Gems D. (2013). Worms need microbes too: microbiota, health and aging in Caenorhabditis elegans. EMBO Mol Med 5, 1300–1310. doi: 10.1002/emmm.201100972 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 19.Watson E., MacNeil L.T., Arda H.E., Zhu L.J., and Walhout A.J.M. (2013). Integration of Metabolic and Gene Regulatory Networks Modulates the C. elegans Dietary Response. Cell 153, 253–266. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2013.02.050 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 20.Zhang F., Berg M., Dierking K., Félix M.-A., Shapira M., Samuel B.S., and Schulenburg H. (2017). Caenorhabditis elegans as a Model for Microbiome Research. Front Microbiol 8. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00485 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 21.Irazoqui J.E., Troemel E.R., Feinbaum R.L., Luhachack L.G., Cezairliyan B.O., and Ausubel F.M. (2010). Distinct Pathogenesis and Host Responses during Infection of C. elegans by P. aeruginosa and S. aureus. PloS Pathog 6, e1000982. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000982 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 22.Kim Y., and Mylonakis E. (2012). Caenorhabditis elegans Immune Conditioning with the Probiotic Bacterium Lactobacillus acidophilus Strain NCFM Enhances Gram-Positive Immune Responses. Infect Immun 80, 2500–2508. doi: 10.1128/IAI.06350-11 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 23.Montalvo-Katz S., Huang H., Appel M.D., Berg M., and Shapira M. (2013). Association with Soil Bacteria Enhances p38-Dependent Infection Resistance in Caenorhabditis elegans. Infect Immun 81, 514–520. doi: 10.1128/IAI.00653-12 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 24.King K.C., Brockhurst M.A., Vasieva O., Paterson S., Betts A., Ford S.A., Frost C.L., Horsburgh M.J., Haldenby S., and Hurst G.D. (2016). Rapid evolution of microbe-mediated protection against pathogens in a worm host. ISME J 10, 1915–1924. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2015.259 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 25.Smolentseva O., Gusarov I., Gautier L., Shamovsky I., DeFrancesco A.S., Losick R., and Nudler E. (2017). Mechanism of biofilm-mediated stress resistance and lifespan extension in C. elegans. Sci Rep 7, 7137. doi: 10.1038/s41598-017-07222-8 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 26.Kissoyan K.A.B., Drechsler M., Stange E.-L., Zimmermann J., Kaleta C., Bode H.B., and Dierking K. (2019). Natural C. elegans Microbiota Protects against Infection via Production of a Cyclic Lipopeptide of the Viscosin Group. Curr Biol 29, 1030–1037.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.01.050 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 27.Félix M.-A., Ashe A., Piffaretti J., Wu G., Nuez I., Bélicard T., Jiang Y., Zhao G., Franz C.J., Goldstein L.D., et al. (2011). Natural and Experimental Infection of Caenorhabditis Nematodes by Novel Viruses Related to Nodaviruses. PloS Biol 9, e1000586. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1000586 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 28.Félix M.-A., and Wang D. (2019). Natural Viruses of Caenorhabditis Nematodes. Annu Rev Genet 53, 313–326. doi: 10.1146/annurev-genet-112618-043756 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 29.Tran T.D., and Luallen R.J. (2023). An organismal understanding of C. elegans innate immune responses, from pathogen recognition to multigenerational resistance. Semin Cell Dev Biol S1084952123000605. doi: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2023.03.005 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 30.Reddy K.C., Dror T., Sowa J.N., Panek J., Chen K., Lim E.S., Wang D., and Troemel E.R. (2017). An Intracellular Pathogen Response Pathway Promotes Proteostasis in C. elegans. Curr Biol 27, 3544–3553.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.10.009 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 31.Ashe A., Bélicard T., Le Pen J., Sarkies P., Frézal L., Lehrbach N.J., Félix M.-A., and Miska E.A. (2013). A deletion polymorphism in the Caenorhabditis elegans RIG-I homolog disables viral RNA dicing and antiviral immunity. eLife 2, e00994. doi: 10.7554/eLife.00994 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 32.Sowa J.N., Jiang H., Somasundaram L., Tecle E., Xu G., Wang D., and Troemel E.R. (2020). The Caenorhabditis elegans RIG-I Homolog DRH-1 Mediates the Intracellular Pathogen Response upon Viral Infection. J Virol 94, e01173–19. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01173-19 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 33.Lažetić V., Wu F., Cohen L.B., Reddy K.C., Chang Y.-T., Gang S.S., Bhabha G., and Troemel E.R. (2022). The transcription factor ZIP-1 promotes resistance to intracellular infection in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nat Commun 13, 17. doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-27621-w [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 34.Le Pen J., Jiang H., Di Domenico T., Kneuss E., Kosałka J., Leung C., Morgan M., Much C., Rudolph K.L.M., Enright A.J., et al. (2018). Terminal uridylyltransferases target RNA viruses as part of the innate immune system. Nat Struct Mol Biol 25, 778–786. doi: 10.1038/s41594-018-0106-9 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 35.Jiang H., Chen K., Sandoval L.E., Leung C., and Wang D. (2017). An Evolutionarily Conserved Pathway Essential for Orsay Virus Infection of Caenorhabditis elegans. mBio 8, e00940–17. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00940-17 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 36.Zhang F., Weckhorst J.L., Assié A., Hosea C., Ayoub C.A., Khodakova A.S., Cabrera M.L., Vidal Vilchis D., Félix M.-A., and Samuel B.S. (2021). Natural genetic variation drives microbiome selection in the Caenorhabditis elegans gut. Curr Biol 31, 2603–2618.e9. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.04.046 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 37.Frézal L., Saglio M., Zhang G., Noble L., Richaud A., and Félix M.-A. (2023). Genome-wide association and environmental suppression of the mortal germline phenotype of wild C. elegans. Preprint at bioRxiv doi: 10.1101/2023.05.17.540956 Accepted at EMBO Reports. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 38.Troemel E.R., Félix M.-A., Whiteman N.K., Barrière A., and Ausubel F.M. (2008). Microsporidia Are Natural Intracellular Parasites of the Nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. PloS Biol 6, e309. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0060309 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 39.Bakowski M.A., Desjardins C.A., Smelkinson M.G., Dunbar T.A., Lopez-Moyado I.F., Rifkin S.A., Cuomo C.A., and Troemel E.R. (2014). Ubiquitin-Mediated Response to Microsporidia and Virus Infection in C. elegans. PloS Pathog 10, e1004200. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1004200 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 40.Frézal L., Jung H., Tahan S., Wang D., and Félix M.-A. (2019). Noda-Like RNA Viruses Infecting Caenorhabditis Nematodes: Sympatry, Diversity, and Reassortment. J Virol 93, e01170–19. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01170-19 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 41.Dirksen P., Assié A., Zimmermann J., Zhang F., Tietje A.-M., Marsh S.A., Félix M.-A., Shapira M., Kaleta C., Schulenburg H., et al. (2020). CeMbio—The Caenorhabditis elegans Microbiome Resource. G3 10, 3025–3039. doi: 10.1534/g3.120.401309 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 42.Meisel J. D. & Kim D. H. (2014). Behavioral avoidance of pathogenic bacteria by Caenorhabditis elegans. Trends Immunol 35, 465–470 doi: 10.1016/j.it.2014.08.008 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 43.Grenfell B. T., Dobson A. P., & Moffatt H. K. (Eds.). (1995). Ecology of infectious diseases in natural populations (Vol. 7). Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
  • 44.Ford S.A., and King K.C. (2016). Harnessing the Power of Defensive Microbes: Evolutionary Implications in Nature and Disease Control. PloS Pathog 12, e1005465. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1005465 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 45.Sterken MG, Snoek LB, Bosman KJ, Daamen J, Riksen JAG, Bakker J, et al. A Heritable Antiviral RNAi Response Limits Orsay Virus Infection in Caenorhabditis elegans N2. Aballay A, editor. PloS ONE. 2014;9: e89760. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0089760 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 46.Castiglioni VG, Olmo-Uceda MJ, Villena-Jimenez A, Munoz-Sanchez JC, Elena SF. Story of an infection: viral dynamics and host responses in the Caenorhabditis elegans-Orsay virus pathosystem. Preprint at bioRxiv. doi: 10.1101/2023.10.31.564947 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 47.Pike V.L., Lythgoe K.A., and King K.C. (2019). On the diverse and opposing effects of nutrition on pathogen virulence. Proc R Soc B 286, 20191220. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2019.1220 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 48.Casorla-Perez L.A., Guennoun R., Cubillas C., Peng B., Kornfeld K., and Wang D. (2022). Orsay Virus Infection of Caenorhabditis elegans Is Modulated by Zinc and Dependent on Lipids. J Virol 96, e01211–22. doi: 10.1128/jvi.01211-22 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 49.Piqué N., Berlanga M., and Miñana-Galbis D. (2019). Health Benefits of Heat-Killed (Tyndallized) Probiotics: An Overview. IJMS 20, 2534. doi: 10.3390/ijms20102534 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 50.Zilber-Rosenberg I., and Rosenberg E. (2008). Role of microorganisms in the evolution of animals and plants: the hologenome theory of evolution. FEMS Microbiol Rev 32, 723–735. doi: 10.1111/j.1574-6976.2008.00123.x [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 51.Henry L.P., Bruijning M., Forsberg S.K.G., and Ayroles J.F. (2021). The microbiome extends host evolutionary potential. Nat Commun 12, 5141. doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-25315-x [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 52.Vassallo BG, Scheidel N, Fischer SEJ, Kim DH. Bacteria Are a Major Determinant of Orsay Virus Transmission and Infection in Caenorhabditis elegans. Preprint at bioRxiv. doi: 10.1101/2023.09.05.556377 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 53.Brenner S. (1974). The genetics of Caenorhabditis elegans. Genetics 77, 71–94. doi: 10.1093/genetics/77.1.71 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 54.Stiernagle T. (2006). Maintenance of C. elegans. WormBook. doi: 10.1895/wormbook.1.101.1 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 55.Franz C.J., Renshaw H., Frezal L., Jiang Y., Félix M.-A., and Wang D. (2014). Orsay, Santeuil and Le Blanc viruses primarily infect intestinal cells in Caenorhabditis nematodes. Virology 448, 255–264. doi: 10.1016/j.virol.2013.09.024 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 56.Chomczynski P, Sacchi N. Single-step method of RNA isolation by acid guanidinium thiocyanate-phenol-chloroform extraction. Analytical Biochemistry. 1987;162: 156–159. doi: 10.1006/abio.1987.9999 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 57.Katoh K., and Standley D.M. (2013). MAFFT Multiple Sequence Alignment Software Version 7: Improvements in Performance and Usability. Molecular Biology and Evolution 30, 772–780. doi: 10.1093/molbev/mst010 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 58.Biegert A., Mayer C., Remmert M., Soding J., and Lupas A.N. (2006). The MPI Bioinformatics Toolkit for protein sequence analysis. Nucleic Acids Res 34, W335–W339. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkl217 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 59.Trifinopoulos J., Nguyen L.-T., von Haeseler A., and Minh B.Q. (2016). W-IQ-TREE: a fast online phylogenetic tool for maximum likelihood analysis. Nucleic Acids Res 44, W232–W235. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkw256 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 60.Keck F., Rimet F., Bouchez A., and Franc A. (2016). Phylosignal: an R package to measure, test, and explore the phylogenetic signal. Ecol Evol 6, 2774–2780. doi: 10.1002/ece3.2051 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 61.R Core Team. (2021). R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing. https://www.R-project.org/
  • 62.Hothorn T., Bretz F., and Westfall P. (2008). Simultaneous Inference in General Parametric Models. Biom J 50, 346–363. doi: 10.1002/bimj.200810425 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 63.Graves, S., Piepho, H., Selzer, L., Dorai-Raj, S., Potvin, C., & Western, B. (2021). multcompView: Visualizations of Paired Comparisons. R package version 0.1–8. https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=multcompView
  • 64.Bates D., Mächler M., Bolker B., and Walker S. (2015). Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4. J. Stat. Soft. 67. doi: 10.18637jss.v067.i01 [Google Scholar]
  • 65.Lenth, R. (2020). Emmeans: Estimated Marginal Means, aka Least-Squares Means. R package version 1.4.7. https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=emmeans
  • 66.Kassambara, A. (2023). Ggpubr: ’ggplot2’ Based Publication Ready Plots. R package version 0.2.4. https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=ggpubr
  • 67.Silva-García CG, Lanjuin A, Heintz C, Dutta S, Clark NM, Mair WB. Single-Copy Knock-In Loci for Defined Gene Expression in Caenorhabditis elegans. G3 Genes|Genomes|Genetics. 2019;9: 2195–2198. doi: 10.1534/g3.119.400314 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

Decision Letter 0

Sara Cherry, Emily R Troemel

15 Aug 2023

Dear González,

Thank you very much for submitting your manuscript "Natural monobacterial environments modulate viral infection in Caenorhabditis elegans" for consideration at PLOS Pathogens. As with all papers reviewed by the journal, your manuscript was reviewed by members of the editorial board and by several independent reviewers. In light of the reviews (below this email), we would like to invite the resubmission of a significantly-revised version that takes into account the reviewers' comments. As you can see, several reviewers requested more information about the bacteria tested in this study. In particular it would be important to see more information about how these bacteria affect ingestion of virus in C. elegans, as effects here could have a significant impact on infection. Also important would be to show more quantitative and direct measurements of viral infection, particularly in places where conclusions are based on GFP reporter expression only, as an indirect read-out of infection.

We cannot make any decision about publication until we have seen the revised manuscript and your response to the reviewers' comments. Your revised manuscript is also likely to be sent to reviewers for further evaluation.

When you are ready to resubmit, please upload the following:

[1] A letter containing a detailed list of your responses to the review comments and a description of the changes you have made in the manuscript. Please note while forming your response, if your article is accepted, you may have the opportunity to make the peer review history publicly available. The record will include editor decision letters (with reviews) and your responses to reviewer comments. If eligible, we will contact you to opt in or out.

[2] Two versions of the revised manuscript: one with either highlights or tracked changes denoting where the text has been changed; the other a clean version (uploaded as the manuscript file).

Important additional instructions are given below your reviewer comments.

Please prepare and submit your revised manuscript within 60 days. If you anticipate any delay, please let us know the expected resubmission date by replying to this email. Please note that revised manuscripts received after the 60-day due date may require evaluation and peer review similar to newly submitted manuscripts.

Thank you again for your submission. We hope that our editorial process has been constructive so far, and we welcome your feedback at any time. Please don't hesitate to contact us if you have any questions or comments.

Sincerely,

Emily R. Troemel

Academic Editor

PLOS Pathogens

Sara Cherry

Section Editor

PLOS Pathogens

Kasturi Haldar

Editor-in-Chief

PLOS Pathogens

orcid.org/0000-0001-5065-158X

Michael Malim

Editor-in-Chief

PLOS Pathogens

orcid.org/0000-0002-7699-2064

***********************

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Part I - Summary

Please use this section to discuss strengths/weaknesses of study, novelty/significance, general execution and scholarship.

Reviewer #1: This exciting study investigates the effect of different bacterial environments on the susceptibility of C. elegans to viral infection. The model system used is the popular model nematode C. elegans and its’ natural viral pathogen Orsay virus, an RNA virus that infects the worm intestine. The question of how microbes can influence viral infection is an important one, with broad relevance.

The authors address this question by conducting a targeted screen to test the susceptibility of C. elegans raised on 67 different bacterial monocultures to Orsay virus infection. They choose bacteria to test that were isolated from the natural environment of C. elegans, increasing the relevance of the study to the host-microbiome field. Their experimental design is rigorous, including repetitions of the initial infection reporter-based screen as well as follow-up testing on hits using RNA FISH to directly assess rates of viral infection. They identify several bacterial strains that enhance C. elegans susceptibility to Orsay infection, as well as a larger number of strains that decrease susceptibility. These effects are consistent across two different Orsay isolates with different infectivity rates.

In order to test the hypothesis that the enhanced susceptibility to infection is due to some bacterial strains providing inadequate nutrition or otherwise weakening the worms, they assessed the progeny production of worms raised on different bacteria. They concluded that there was no correlation between the effect of bacteria on progeny production and on viral susceptibility. While I agree that the data overall do not suggest general ill-health as the most likely explanation for the viral susceptibility effects seen with some of the bacterial strains, I think that this section could benefit from some additional clarifying language, as detailed below under Minor Revisions.

The authors next examined the effect of the bacterial environment on the horizontal transfer of the viral infection between worms. They were able to show that when OrV infected worms were transferred to infection-suppressing bacterial strains after an initial infection on OP50, the activation of the infection reporter was reduced in the 1st generation on the new bacteria, and almost completely eliminated by the 2nd. Although this data does in general support a reduction in horizontal transfer of infection, it is my opinion that the exclusive reliance on the infection reporter in this series of experiments is a significant weakness that undermines the conclusions in this section (see comment under Major Revisions).

The authors investigated the hypothesis that the infection-suppressing bacteria were somehow altering the infectivity of the virions through a two-pronged approach: pre-incubating the virus with the bacteria before infecting worms on OP50, and pre-infecting worms on OP50 then transferring to the infection-suppressing bacteria. These experiments convincingly demonstrated that the bacteria are exerting their infection-suppressing effects by altering host physiology, not virion infectivity. They further showed that heat-killed bacteria lost their infection suppression effect, lending further support to this hypothesis. They followed up with a series of bacterial mixing experiments, where they showed that the infection suppressing effect prevailed in a mixed bacterial population. Altogether, this data supports their conclusions that the infection-modulating effects of the bacteria are unlikely to be based on the nutritional content of the bacteria or bacterial effects on virions directly.

Finally, the authors also looked for interactions between the bacterial effects on OrV infection rates and host pathways known to be involved in resistance to viral infection. This series of experiments used both infection reporters and RNA FISH together with mutants to show that the bacterial effects on viral infection rates were, with a few exceptions, independent of the DRH-1, RDE-1, and CDE-1 pathways. The resistance to viral infection induced by Pseudomonas BIGb0477, Acinetobacter MYb10, and Lelliottia JUb276 were all found to be partially dependent on DRH-1. The complexities of the partial dependence/independence of each tested strain on the known pathways are discussed with an appropriate degree of nuance, and the conclusions add significantly to our knowledge of bacteria/host/virus interactions in C. elegans.

Overall this is a well-designed study that addresses an important topic in host-pathogen interactions, and lays the groundwork for future investigations of the immune enhancing/suppressing mechanisms of different bacteria. It will be of broad interest not only to the large community of C. elegans researchers, but also to the wider fields of host-pathogen and microbiome interactions.

Reviewer #2: In Gonzalez and Felix, the authors conduct a novel screen of 67 different bacterial strains naturally associated with C. elegans to determine if they influence infection by Orsay virus (OV), a natural viral pathogen of C. elegans. The authors identify both bacterial strains that enhance OV infection as well as bacterial species that promote resistance to OV infection. The authors demonstrate that prior incubation of OV virions with bacterial cultures that suppress OV infection does not reduce their ability to infect worms cultured on OP50 (E. coli) lawns, which are the common laboratory “food” used in C. elegans culture. This observation raises the fascinating possibility that these bacteria induce an antiviral response in worms. Interestingly, the authors data suggest that some of these “resistance-inducing” bacterial strains (e.g. BIGb0477, Myb10, and JUb276) may partially suppress OV infection by activation of responses that require DRH-1, which is involved in both antiviral RNAi responses and in inducing the Intracellular Pathogen Response (IPR). Remarkably, inactivation of RDE-1 (required for antiviral RNAi) or ZIP-1 (required for the IPR) does not reduce the ability of these resistance inducing bacteria to suppress OV infection, suggesting that these bacteria trigger a DRH-1-dependent mechanism to inhibit OV that is independent of RNAi or the IPR. Although this study does not provide much mechanistic depth in terms of understanding how bacteria promote or inhibit OV infection, there is significant novelty in this study in that it is the first to investigate bacteria-virus interactions in the C. elegans model on a large scale and is an important first step in establishing the worm model for studying such pathogen-pathogen-host interactions.

Enthusiasm for the manuscript was reduced by the poor organization of the manuscript (e.g. many figures are difficult to read/interpret). Also, there are often key experimental details left out that make it difficult to interpret some of the experiments presented (see specific comments below). A major concern is that the authors have not considered that some of the bacterial strains that are scored as inducing resistance to OV infection may in fact be promoting avoidance behavior by C. elegans, and thus reduced feeding which would in turn reduce ingestion of OV particles by worms. This point should be experimentally addressed. In addition, more quantitative methods should be used for assessing OV replication and not just infection rates, including qPCR-based methods to measure viral loads. The authors use GFP-based reporter strains and FISH staining to quantify infection rates but do not provide convincing evidence that the key bacterial strains highlighted from their initial screen actually increase or decrease OV replication.

Reviewer #3: See attached PDF for a formatted document.

Summary.

Host-microbial interactions can modulate host susceptibility to viral infections, but how this occurs is poorly understood. In the current study, the authors screen 67 natural bacterial strains for changes in Caenorhabditis elegans response to Orsay viral (OV) infection. Monocultures of most bacterial isolates reduce viral infection, which the authors claim is not due to viral degradation or poor nutrition. Surprisingly, C. elegans mutations known to compromise host antiviral responses are dispensable for the increased resistance.

Overall analysis.

Unraveling the complex interactions between host, viruses, nutrition, and microbiomes is critical for the development of novel treatments to improve human health. C. elegans is a powerful system to reveal these interactions; the authors should be commended for undertaking a large scale analysis of a diverse set of natural bacterial strains. However, there are several major concerns that severely limit enthusiasm for publishing the manuscript in the current form. First, the study is completely descriptive and provides little to no biological insight. There are interesting observations with insufficient follow-up; for instance, titrating in small amounts of natural bacteria acts dominantly to suppress pals-5p::GFP induction (a readout of host response to OV). Second, as all of the genetic analysis produced negative results, no putative mechanism is provided for why any bacterial food source would alter C. elegans host response to OV infection. However, intuitively the manuscript may be one discovery away from providing the necessary mechanistic insight necessary to warrant further consideration for PLOS Pathogens (suggestions below). Third, some of the experimental approaches are superficial and require additional rigor. For example, throughout the authors use a population assay for activation of pals-5p::GFP expression as a binary readout, which may lack sufficient nuance to adequately reveal relevant biology. Additional major but more easily addressable concerns include: 1. the authors overstate several conclusions based on indirect evidence, make a jump in logic, or commit a logical fallacy. Threads started within several supplemental figures need additional rigor and moved into the main text. Lastly, details are missing or difficult to infer in places and the quality of parts of several figures (embedded text) is poor. These and other concerns are described in additional detail below.

**********

Part II – Major Issues: Key Experiments Required for Acceptance

Please use this section to detail the key new experiments or modifications of existing experiments that should be absolutely required to validate study conclusions.

Generally, there should be no more than 3 such required experiments or major modifications for a "Major Revision" recommendation. If more than 3 experiments are necessary to validate the study conclusions, then you are encouraged to recommend "Reject".

Reviewer #1: The conclusion in line 158 “Natural bacteria eliminate OrV in infected nematode populations within two generations” is not fully supported by the evidence presented. This conclusion is drawn from an experiment in which worms are infected with OrV on OP50, then transferred to an infection-suppressing bacterial environment and allowed to reproduce. My issue with this conclusion is that the only readout used to assess infection in this experiment was pals-5p::GFP infection reporter readout, which is not a direct readout of viral infection but of worm immune response. The claim of “virus elimination” (lines 158 & 169-170) is therefore not fully supported by this data, which could also be explained by a change in the transcriptional activation of pals-5 in the progeny. The authors should either moderate their language on this point (in the lines noted above), or conduct RNA FISH staining to directly assess viral infection in order to support this claim.

Reviewer #2: The authors should examine if the key (5) bacterial strains they test throughout their study alter C. elegans feeding/avoidance behaviors.

Related to the first point, the authors should address the possibility that the key bacterial strains they investigate negatively impact C. elegans development (compared to OP50). Given that worms at different stages of development may have altered OV susceptibilities, the apparent impact of a bacterial culture on OV infection rates may be an indirect effect of altered growth/development rates. Reduced development rates caused by bacteria could also explain the reduced C. elegans brood sizes observed with most of these bacterial cultures.

The authors should validate key findings with more quantitative methods to assess differences in OV replication (e.g. qPCR of viral RNA to measure viral loads).

Reviewer #3: See attached for formatted document.

Major Concerns/Considerations.

1. The study is completely descriptive, which diminishes impact because insufficient biological insight is provided and there is no mechanism. Many paragraphs are essentially lists describing how each phenotype is affected by a particular natural bacteria.

2. Analysis is superficial in places. For example, while a 16S phylogenic analysis organizes the natural bacterial strains and reveals some clusters of bacterial strains that share a similar phenotype (e.g., Comamonas result in greater pals-5::GFP expression within a population), there is insufficient follow-up into what this means. For example:

a. Are any of the bacteria natural C. elegans pathogens (e.g., I thought Pseudomonas is a pathogen)? Do any limit survival/lifespan when maintained?

b. Which are gram positive or negative?

c. Are the bacteria rods or spheres?

d. How big are the bacteria (can they pass through the pharyngeal grinder)?

e. Do they colonize the intestinal lumen (opportunistic pathogen)?

f. What is the nutritional content of the bacteria? For example, some gram positive bacteria have thick cell wall polysaccharides covalently bound to peptidoglycan, which would increase relative sugar content.

3. There are several interesting observations that should inform a testable hypothesis but are not adequately explored or developed. Some examples of where the authors could focus in greater depth:

a. Growth on a natural bacterial results in loss of pals-5::GFP induction after OV infection but not after heat stress. This seems like a key observation! What does this mean? A trivial explanation would be that OV fails to adequately enter the host, which could be more rigorously tested using existing transgenic C. elegans strains that have the OV genome integrated under the control of an inducible reporter. Assuming OV entry is not impaired this suggests a specific adaptive response.

b. Titrating in small amounts of natural bacteria suppresses pals-5p::GFP induction and requires live-bacteria, which is somewhat surprising as the chosen bacteria are phylogenetically diverse. Nevertheless, this suggests a dominant effect that deserves additional consideration. Do some clades of natural bacteria secrete a dominant factor (which could be heat-labile) while others require ingestion? What happens if you mix natural bacteria that either enhance or limit pals-5::GFP expression? If you transfer worms grown in the presence of a natural bacteria, can it horizontally transfer resistance (suggests a secreted response between animals). I’m not sure of the best course, but the dominant effect seems like a key observation.

4. The authors use a population assay for pals-5::GFP expression as a binary readout, which may lack sufficient nuance to adequately reveal relevant biology and is too superficial. Additional level of secondary analysis is required (rigor). Does the absolute levels of GFP expression change? Which cells induce pals-5::GFP? Representative images must be included throughout. Throughout the authors describe the population assays as “similar levels of activation”, which is misleading.

5. The authors must more rigorously test whether a bacterial innate immune response is triggering an adaptive response to limit OV. Whether natural bacteria are inducing a bacterial innate immune response is underdeveloped and only superficially examined. Bacterial pathogens are diverse, induce specific reporters, and have unique signaling mechanisms (and genetic requirements).

6. Generally, animals are first introduced to natural bacteria at the same time OV is applied. The authors have not sufficiently distinguished whether exposure to a natural bacteria is inducing an acute adaptive response that is altering host-OV interaction, response, or dynamics of infection. Or whether a natural bacteria is generally protective. For example, if animals are maintained on a natural bacteria (that generates no bacterial innate immune response) as a food source for several generations, would they still be resistant to OV? If not, this suggests that switching food sources results in an adaptive adjustment period; perhaps a temporary alteration in metabolic flux as animals acclimate to the new food source. If animals are moved from a natural bacteria back to OP50, do animals retain resistance to OV? If so, for how many generations?

7. The authors describe horizontal transmission of OV (lines 158-163), but assess vertical transmission (Figure 3)? The text is misleading as horizontal expression isn’t actually tested. How far are into the infection are the L4 animals on OP50 just prior to infection? Were they pals-5::GFP positive? Were the animals chosen (in any capacity) for a similar intensity of GFP fluorescence (how is this normalized)? It is unclear from the schematic, exactly what the authors are doing and neither the figure legend nor method section contain the specific experimental details. This is problematic throughout and other experiments lack adequate description of the methods: for example, line 148: total brood sizes. How was this measured? How many animals? Details are missing.

8. Supplemental Figure 4 should be in the main text and be expanded to include a more rigorous analysis. For example, do these bacterial strains affect the growth rate of C. elegans, especially for the bacterial strains that repress pals-5::GFP induction? If the proportion of animals with pals-5 induction as readout, the authors need to confirm that animals fed with different bacterial are exactly at the same stage when infected.

9. It is unclear whether there are acute behavior changes after exposing animals to a new natural bacteria. Does pumping rate change immediately upon transfer to a new food source? Does feeding behavior change? Do animals avoid the bacterial lawn? It has previously been shown that some mutant C. elegans with apparent improved bacterial innate immunity were actually better able to sense and avoid the bacterial pathogen; these strains failed to show improved survival when a pathogenic bacteria lawn was spread across the entire plate. Did the authors uniformly coat the plate each bacteria? And was OV also distributed across the full plate? If this was not considered, then reduced pals-5::GFP expression within a C. elegans population after exposure to a mildly pathogenic bacteria could be explained trivially due to avoiding the lawn. The authors find that animals with reduced pals-5::GFP expression after grown on some natural bacteria results in extended reproductive spans, which would be consistent with this possibility. Note, the authors do find one natural bacteria that increases pals-5::GFP expression also increases reproductive span; this does not reject the hypothesis that animals with lower pals-5::GFP are avoiding another natural bacteria.

10. The authors over-interpret their results to draw conclusions that are too strong. Experiments do not always test what the authors conclude, and the authors tend to draw conclusions from indirect observations. For example, lines 135-138: “In conclusion, the Acinetobacter BIGb0102 environment enhances infection…” is an overstatement without quantification of endogenous pals-5 and RNA1/2 levels (RT-qPCR for each). Again, lines 154-155: “We thus conclude that the bacterial environments that enable strong viral infection did not do so by generally weakening the host.” is an overstatement as it is unknown whether viral infection is occurring at the same levels and “weakening” lacks informational content.

Other examples were also found and the authors should be more conservative in their conclusions. For example, line 184: “… can alter transcriptional response…” is a jump in logic that is not been tested experimentally. Line 208 subheading: “Unknown antiviral pathways are involved…” and line 290-91 “…unknown antiviral mechanisms…” are not supported with experimental results and is an “Appeal to Ignorance” logical fallacy (i.e., the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence).

11. Overall, the writing needs to be improved. Examples:

a. Some of the phrasing is awkwardly constructed: for example, line 32: “plays a key role in shaping various of its traits”.

b. In places the authors need to be specific, e.g., line 145: “to those suppressing it”, line 267: “certain bacterial environments” are vague and needs better clarity.

c. In other places the incorrect tense is used.

d. The authors should not refer to their prior work in 3rd person (e.g., line 141: Reported by Frezal).

e. There is inconsistent application of the same words (e.g., lines 259-260) strains of bacteria, natural strains of worms.

12. Figure legends for Figures 3-6 fail to describe number of tested animals, trials, statistical analysis, and significance. Links to primary data tables (supplementary files) are missing. Figure legend 2e indicates that 100 animals were assessed for total number of viable progeny with each column? Is this correct?

13. Line 272-275: “In C. elegans’ bacterial environments there is no distinction between food (nutrition) and biotic environment. This overlap is likely significant, given that the lipid content of the nematodes plays a crucial role in viral infections”. I absolutely agree! The authors should assess whether any of the bacterial clades alter major lipid stores, many straightforward assays are routinely used.

14. Heat killed bacteria are not a good food source and could confound results. UV-killed are a good alternative (or perhaps treated with antibiotics in some instances) to confirm results.

15. Was bacterial density normalized between natural bacterial strains? How well do each grow? Many bacteria do not grow as well in LB as E. coli.

16. In many figures the text has been rendered in a manner that makes it illegible.

17. Figure 6g is not mentioned in the text?

**********

Part III – Minor Issues: Editorial and Data Presentation Modifications

Please use this section for editorial suggestions as well as relatively minor modifications of existing data that would enhance clarity.

Reviewer #1: Regarding lines 144-155: It would be beneficial here to clarify that progeny production is only one dimension of worm health; there are known instances of trade-offs between progeny production and other health measures such as lifespan or immunity. It would also help the clarity of this section to note that although the authors find brood size effects in Acinetobacter BIGb0102 (higher viral susceptibility but also higher brood size) and several of the other strains (lower viral susceptibility and also lower brood size) that seem to argue against the general-health hypothesis, they do find one strain that contradicts this pattern. Infection-enhancing strain Comamonas BIGb0172 also has lower brood size, and although they note that the brood size on BIGb0172 is similar to that on several other bacterial strains that protect against viral infection, this does not rule out a general health-suppressive effect at work in the specific case of BIGb0172.

There are issues with the spacing/fonts on nearly all of the figures that make some of the labels difficult to read in the PDF. This appears to be some sort of formatting/encoding issue.

The clarity of the figure legends could be improved in several places:

-In figure 2, the legend states that “Each data point represents an independent population of ~100 animals”; since individual data points are not shown in the graphs (only means), this is somewhat unclear. The authors should either adjust their language to make it clear whether they mean each experimental replicate used 100 worms (and how many replicates were performed), or alternatively show the individual data points for each replicate in addition to the mean.

-Overall, it is difficult to discern for most experiments shown (except figure 1) how many replicates were performed. This information should be added to the figure legends and the Materials and Methods.

In several places the text references an incorrect figure:

-on lines 204-205, it should be Supplementary figure 6D not 5D

-on line 232, it should be Supplementary figure 5C not 6D

-on line 233, there is no panel H in figure 6

-on line 242, there is no figure 7

-on line 254, it should be Supplementary Figure 6, not 7

Reviewer #2: 1. There is very little justification for the specific bacterial isolates used other than they are “natural bacterial strains”. Are certain strains/groups more commonly associated with C. elegans in the environment and thus may be more relevant to modulating virus susceptibility in the wild?

2. The authors should clearly state for each figure (e.g. in figure legends) which specific strain of C. elegans (e.g. ERT54?) was used for each assay.

3. Supplementary Figure 1-it would be helpful for the authors to comment further on how pals-5 activation was scored, including representative images of negative vs. positive activation phenotypes as well as control images where no virus was added because the authors indicate that the pals-5 reporter was not activated by any of the screened bacteria in the absence of virus infection but no data are shown to support this statement. Was GFP signal simply scored qualitatively as positive or negative if any part of the animal appeared green or was there some sort of quantitative measurement of GFP signal that had to meet a particular threshold to be scored as positive?

4. Supplementary Figure 2A- it is not clear why the y-axis is different between A and B. Are they both supposed to be percentage of animals showing pals-5 reporter activation? If so, why are the percentages so low in 2A (<2%) compared to 2B (~40-80%)?

5. I suggest re-reviewing the manuscript for grammatical errors and sentence structure throughout. For example, in the abstract line 17- naturally should be “natural” and in the Introduction line 33 “a key role in shaping various of its traits” should be re-worded.

6. Several of the figure labels are illegible (e.g. Figure 2A-C, Supplementary Figure 3A).

7. The authors identify a dramatic difference between Leucobacter luti BIG0106 and JUb18 strains relating to their effects on pals-5 reporter activation during OV infection but do not provide a possible explanation for this difference. The authors should ensure the identity of those bacterial strains are verified.

8. For the experiment in Figure 2D where two OV strains are compared, how did the authors ensure they were plating out similar doses of the two viruses? Also in Fig. 2, it is not clear what “Experiment 1 2 3” is referring to at the bottom.

9. In Fig. 2E, the authors argue that because one bacterial strain (BIGb0102) that enhanced OV infection rates leads to higher brood sizes that bacteria that enhance infection cannot be doing so by generally weakening host physiology. This cannot be concluded on the basis of this one example, because it is possible that some of the bacterial strains that enhance infection and that reduce worm brood sizes (e.g. BIGb0172) do so by reducing animal fitness. This relates to my earlier point regarding whether these different bacteria affect worm development rates compared to OP50 because altered development may lead to reduced brood sizes. Was brood size determined for each bacterial isolate in the absence of OV as well? Details regarding how brood size was measured should be included.

10. Line 232 refers to Supplementary Figure 6C but I think this should be 5C. Also line 245 refers to Supplementary Figure 7 but there is figure does not exist so I think this should be Supplementary Figure 6. In general, references to each figure in the text should be double-checked throughout.

11. The bars in Fig. 6G that are supposed to indicate WT or drh-1 genotypes look the same to me, precluding interpretation of these data.

Reviewer #3: See attached for formatted document.

1. Line 169: Figure 7B should be 3B. Line 242: 7G should be 6F. Line 245: Supplementary Figure 7 should be 6. The authors should double check Figure numbers throughout.

2. The definition of “natural” bacteria should be better defined. It seems odd to call E. coli “non-natural” bacteria (line 257).

3. Link to the full strain list (Table S2) needs to be mentioned in the first subsection of the Material and Methods.

4. Line 304: “It was created…” suggests a new strain was generated. Details on how to validate genotype (et cetera) are missing.

5. Line 340: “Evaluation of viral infection” should mention FISH.

6. S4 uses a colorblind unfriendly palette.

7. Fig. 1 use of terms enhancer and suppressor are not strictly known and inaccurate.

8. “Worms” is jargon and has an inherent negative connotation that diminishes the impact of C. elegans research; nematodes, C. elegans, or animals are better descriptors.

**********

PLOS authors have the option to publish the peer review history of their article (what does this mean?). If published, this will include your full peer review and any attached files.

If you choose “no”, your identity will remain anonymous but your review may still be made public.

Do you want your identity to be public for this peer review? For information about this choice, including consent withdrawal, please see our Privacy Policy.

Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: No

Reviewer #3: No

Figure Files:

While revising your submission, please upload your figure files to the Preflight Analysis and Conversion Engine (PACE) digital diagnostic tool, https://pacev2.apexcovantage.com. PACE helps ensure that figures meet PLOS requirements. To use PACE, you must first register as a user. Then, login and navigate to the UPLOAD tab, where you will find detailed instructions on how to use the tool. If you encounter any issues or have any questions when using PACE, please email us at figures@plos.org.

Data Requirements:

Please note that, as a condition of publication, PLOS' data policy requires that you make available all data used to draw the conclusions outlined in your manuscript. Data must be deposited in an appropriate repository, included within the body of the manuscript, or uploaded as supporting information. This includes all numerical values that were used to generate graphs, histograms etc.. For an example see here on PLOS Biology: http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pbio.1001908#s5.

Reproducibility:

To enhance the reproducibility of your results, we recommend that you deposit your laboratory protocols in protocols.io, where a protocol can be assigned its own identifier (DOI) such that it can be cited independently in the future. Additionally, PLOS ONE offers an option to publish peer-reviewed clinical study protocols. Read more information on sharing protocols at https://plos.org/protocols?utm_medium=editorial-email&utm_source=authorletters&utm_campaign=protocols

Attachment

Submitted filename: Gonzalez and Felix review.pdf

Decision Letter 1

Emily R Troemel, Ashley L St John

4 Jan 2024

Dear Dr. Gonzalez,

We are pleased to inform you that your manuscript 'Naturally-associated bacteria modulate Orsay virus infection of Caenorhabditis elegans' has been provisionally accepted for publication in PLOS Pathogens.

Before your manuscript can be formally accepted you will need to complete some formatting changes, which you will receive in a follow up email. A member of our team will be in touch with a set of requests.

Please note that your manuscript will not be scheduled for publication until you have made the required changes, so a swift response is appreciated.

IMPORTANT: The editorial review process is now complete. PLOS will only permit corrections to spelling, formatting or significant scientific errors from this point onwards. Requests for major changes, or any which affect the scientific understanding of your work, will cause delays to the publication date of your manuscript.

Should you, your institution's press office or the journal office choose to press release your paper, you will automatically be opted out of early publication. We ask that you notify us now if you or your institution is planning to press release the article. All press must be co-ordinated with PLOS.

Thank you again for supporting Open Access publishing; we are looking forward to publishing your work in PLOS Pathogens.

Best regards,

Emily R. Troemel

Academic Editor

PLOS Pathogens

Ashley St. John

Section Editor

PLOS Pathogens

Kasturi Haldar

Editor-in-Chief

PLOS Pathogens

orcid.org/0000-0001-5065-158X

Michael Malim

Editor-in-Chief

PLOS Pathogens

orcid.org/0000-0002-7699-2064

***********************************************************

Please address the minor comments from Reviewer #2, regarding labeling for timepoints on x-axis of Fig. 5A, and the Fig. S2A figure legend.

Reviewer Comments (if any, and for reference):

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Part I - Summary

Please use this section to discuss strengths/weaknesses of study, novelty/significance, general execution and scholarship.

Reviewer #1: This exciting study investigates the effect of different bacterial environments on the susceptibility of C. elegans to viral infection. The model system used is the popular model nematode C. elegans and its’ natural viral pathogen Orsay virus, an RNA virus that infects the worm intestine. The question of how microbes can influence viral infection is an important one, with broad relevance.

The authors address this question by conducting a targeted screen to test the susceptibility of C. elegans raised on 67 different bacterial monocultures to Orsay virus infection. They choose bacteria to test that were isolated from the natural environment of C. elegans, increasing the relevance of the study to the host-microbiome field. Their experimental design is rigorous, including repetitions of the initial infection reporter-based screen as well as follow-up testing on hits using RNA FISH to directly assess rates of viral infection. They identify several bacterial strains that enhance C. elegans susceptibility to Orsay infection, as well as a larger number of strains that decrease susceptibility.

The authors have thoroughly addressed my major and minor concerns regarding their original submission. They have also added a substantial amount of new data that improves the paper, and have edited the text to significantly improve the clarity.

Overall this is a well-designed study that addresses an important topic in host-pathogen interactions, and lays the groundwork for future investigations of the immune enhancing/suppressing mechanisms of different bacteria. It will be of broad interest not only to the large community of C. elegans researchers, but also to the wider fields of host-pathogen and microbiome interactions.

Reviewer #2: In Gonzalez and Felix, the authors conduct a novel screen of ~70 bacterial strains naturally associated with C. elegans to determine if they influence infection by Orsay virus (OV), a natural viral pathogen of C. elegans. The authors identify both bacterial strains that enhance OV infection as well as bacterial species that promote resistance to OV infection. The authors demonstrate that prior incubation of OV virions with bacterial cultures that suppress OV infection does not reduce their ability to infect worms cultured on OP50 (E. coli) lawns, which are the common laboratory “food” used in C. elegans culture. This observation raises the interestingly possibility that these bacteria can modulate antiviral responses in worms. Although the authors do not provide a deep mechanistic dive into the nature of these responses, their data suggest that the repression of OV replication by some bacterial strains (JUb44 and BIG0172) is independent of DRH-1, a key regulator of known antiviral response pathways. Thus, these observations provide the groundwork for the exploration of additional mechanisms, independent of DRH-1 that may regulate innate antiviral responses in the worm. This manuscript will be of general interest to those studying microbe-microbe-host interactions.

In the revised manuscript, the authors have done a good job in taking an experiment-focused approach to addressing my comments and have improved the manuscript substantially. I only have a couple minor comments:

1. The labels for timepoints on the x-axis for Fig. 5A are not evenly spaced. It may be better to only indicate major ticks (time points) or define the x-axis as hours (h) and then remove the “h” after each time point to improve clarity of the labels.

2. Supplementary Fig. 2 legend- last sentence should be corrected to “this DNA fragment probably contains…”.

**********

Part II – Major Issues: Key Experiments Required for Acceptance

Please use this section to detail the key new experiments or modifications of existing experiments that should be absolutely required to validate study conclusions.

Generally, there should be no more than 3 such required experiments or major modifications for a "Major Revision" recommendation. If more than 3 experiments are necessary to validate the study conclusions, then you are encouraged to recommend "Reject".

Reviewer #1: (No Response)

Reviewer #2: My prior experimental suggestions have been adequately addressed in the revised manuscript.

**********

Part III – Minor Issues: Editorial and Data Presentation Modifications

Please use this section for editorial suggestions as well as relatively minor modifications of existing data that would enhance clarity.

Reviewer #1: (No Response)

Reviewer #2: 1. The labels for timepoints on the x-axis for Fig. 5A are not evenly spaced. It may be better to only indicate major ticks (time points) or define the x-axis as hours (h) and then remove the “h” after each time point to improve clarity of the labels.

2. Supplementary Fig. 2 legend- last sentence should be corrected to “this DNA fragment probably contains…”.

**********

PLOS authors have the option to publish the peer review history of their article (what does this mean?). If published, this will include your full peer review and any attached files.

If you choose “no”, your identity will remain anonymous but your review may still be made public.

Do you want your identity to be public for this peer review? For information about this choice, including consent withdrawal, please see our Privacy Policy.

Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: No

Acceptance letter

Emily R Troemel, Ashley L St John

12 Jan 2024

Dear Dr. González,

We are delighted to inform you that your manuscript, "Naturally-associated bacteria modulate Orsay virus infection of Caenorhabditis elegans," has been formally accepted for publication in PLOS Pathogens.

We have now passed your article onto the PLOS Production Department who will complete the rest of the pre-publication process. All authors will receive a confirmation email upon publication.

The corresponding author will soon be receiving a typeset proof for review, to ensure errors have not been introduced during production. Please review the PDF proof of your manuscript carefully, as this is the last chance to correct any scientific or type-setting errors. Please note that major changes, or those which affect the scientific understanding of the work, will likely cause delays to the publication date of your manuscript. Note: Proofs for Front Matter articles (Pearls, Reviews, Opinions, etc...) are generated on a different schedule and may not be made available as quickly.

Soon after your final files are uploaded, the early version of your manuscript, if you opted to have an early version of your article, will be published online. The date of the early version will be your article's publication date. The final article will be published to the same URL, and all versions of the paper will be accessible to readers.

Thank you again for supporting open-access publishing; we are looking forward to publishing your work in PLOS Pathogens.

Best regards,

Michael Malim

Editor-in-Chief

PLOS Pathogens

orcid.org/0000-0002-7699-2064

Associated Data

    This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

    Supplementary Materials

    S1 Fig. Proportion of animals with activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter after Orsay virus inoculation on different bacteria.

    Original data used in Fig 1, including here the experimental block structure. For each bacterial environment, three replicates of ca. 100 ERT54 animals were challenged with the OrV JUv1580. The proportion of animals activating the pals-5p::GFP reporter was measured 72 hpi. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Letters over the bars indicate letter-based grouping for multiple comparisons. The yellow bar indicates E. coli OP50.

    (TIF)

    S2 Fig. Fluorescence microscopy of ERT54 [pals-5p::GFP; myo-2p::mCherry] animals that were mock- or virus-inoculated in different bacterial environments.

    Animals mock-inoculated with M9 or inoculated with OrV JUv1580 were visualized at 72 hpi using a 10x objective mounted on AxioImager M1 (Zeiss) compound microscope and images were captured with a PIXIS 1024 (Princeton instruments) camera. Scale bar represents 100 μm. GFP-positive animals can be seen in the intestinal cells of virus-inoculated animals on the three bacteria on top. Note that a less intense fluorescence can be seen in the posterior intestinal cells of animals in both mock- and virus-inoculated populations, especially in JUb44 environments. This posterior intestinal fluorescence is also observed in uninfected animals grown in OP50 [39]. We hypothesize that this fluorescence is caused by the 3’UTR of unc-54 used in plasmids that generated the ERT54 strain. This DNA fragment probably contains cis-regulatory sites for the adjacent gene, aex-5, expressed in posterior intestinal cells as mentioned in [67].

    (TIF)

    S3 Fig. Replication of some experiments shown in Fig 1.

    (A) The impact of bacterial strains on viral infection of ERT54 nematodes is consistent across experimental blocks (performed on different days). (B) New experiment with the bacteria that enhanced infection on the initial screening shown in Fig 1. Each data point represents a biological replicate, with 100 animals assayed per population. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Asterisks on the graphs represent values of significance: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are not labeled. Significance was calculated using a general linear model with bacteria as a factor and Dunnett’s contrasts to compare all conditions against the Escherichia OP50 reference.

    (TIF)

    S4 Fig. Test of several strains of selected bacterial species.

    (A) Activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter upon viral infection of ERT54 animals on different strains of the same bacterial species. (B) Activation of pals-5p::GFP reporter upon viral infection of animals on different E. coli strains. Each data point represents a biological replicate, with 100 animals assayed per population. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Asterisks on the graphs represent values of significance: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are not labeled. Significance was calculated using a general linear model with bacteria as a factor and Dunnett’s contrasts to compare all conditions against the Escherichia OP50 reference.

    (TIF)

    S5 Fig. Developmental growth rate of C. elegans on mixed bacterial environments.

    Arrested axenic L1 larvae of the ERT54 strain were exposed to each monobacterial environment or to mixed environments composed of 20% of BIGb0102 and 80% of another bacterium (indicated in the x axis). The proportion of adults of 3 independent populations (100 animals per population) per environmental condition was observed after 46 and 62 h.

    (TIF)

    S6 Fig. New experiments to confirm results.

    (A) Activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter upon OrV infection of animals on different single CeMbio strains and the whole CeMbio community. (B) Repetition of experiment shown in Fig 6, but only evaluating the activation of the pals-5p::GFP reporter. (C) Repetition of experiment shown in Fig 6, using a transfer of an agar chunk after 2 generations (detailed in methods). (D) Repetition of experiments, testing drh-1 animals, shown in Fig 8D. (E) Susceptibility to viral infection on Lelliottia JUb276 of animals carrying a natural deletion allele of drh-1. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. Black symbols indicate the significance of the difference between the labeled bacteria and the Escherichia OP50 reference, while red symbols indicate the significance of differences between genotypes: *** P < 0.001; ** P < 0.01; * 0.01 < P < 0.05; P values higher than 0.05 are labeled as “ns”. Significance was calculated using an analysis of variance with bacteria as a factor (Panels A,C,D), a general linear model where the factors were bacteria and generations (Panel D), or a general linear model where the factors were bacteria and host genotype (Panel E). In both cases Tukey contrasts were used for post hoc analyses.

    (TIF)

    S7 Fig. Natural bacteria and anti-bacterial immune pathways.

    (A) Experiment testing, on Escherichia OP50 or Lelliottia JUb276, virus susceptibility of mutants with alterations in different genes involved in the response against bacterial infections. We tested three biological replicates per genotype, with 100 animals assayed per population. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. (B) Experiment testing, on Escherichia OP50 or Lelliottia JUb276, virus susceptibility of tir-1 mutants. We tested three biological replicates per genotype, with 100 animals assayed per population. Data are presented as mean ± standard error. (C) Fluorescence microscopy of the sysm-1p::GFP reporter. JU4289 animals carry the agsl219[sysm-1p::GFP + ttx-3p::GFP] transgene. Three day-old JU4289 animals grown at 20°C in the indicated bacterial environment were observed using a 10x objective on an AxioImager M1 (Zeiss) compound microscope. The Cherry and GFP fluorescence channels were captured with a PIXIS 1024 (Princeton instruments) camera and overlaid. PA14 and DB11 bacterial environments serve as positive control for the reporter activation. Scale bar represents 100 μm.

    (TIF)

    S1 Table. List of bacterial strains used in this work.

    The pals-5p::GFP column indicates that C. elegans is able to activate the pals-5p::GFP reporter on the tested strains after heat shock. For this test, 48 hours-old ERT54 animals were placed at 30°C for 24 h, being observed right after the 24 h heat shock. FR is an abbreviation for France, GER for Germany, and USA for United States of America.

    (DOCX)

    S2 Table. Nematode strains used in this study.

    (DOCX)

    S1 File. 16S rDNA sequences used for the phylogenetic analysis of the natural bacteria.

    (TXT)

    S2 File. Data generated in this study.

    (XLSX)

    Attachment

    Submitted filename: Gonzalez and Felix review.pdf

    Attachment

    Submitted filename: Response_reviewers_PLOS Pathogens_Gonzalez and Felix 2023.pdf

    Data Availability Statement

    All relevant data are within the manuscript and its Supporting information files.


    Articles from PLOS Pathogens are provided here courtesy of PLOS

    RESOURCES