Abstract
Diverse microbial pathogens are known to attenuate host protein synthesis. Consequently, the host mounts a defense response against protein translation inhibition, leading to increased transcript levels of immune genes. The seemingly paradoxical upregulation of immune gene transcripts in response to blocked protein synthesis suggests that the defense mechanism against translation inhibition may not universally benefit host survival. However, a comprehensive assessment of host survival on pathogens upon blockage of different stages of protein synthesis is currently lacking. Here, we investigate the impact of knockdown of various translation initiation and elongation factors on the survival of Caenorhabditis elegans exposed to Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Intriguingly, we observe opposing effects on C. elegans survival depending on whether translation initiation or elongation is inhibited. While translation initiation inhibition enhances survival, elongation inhibition decreases it. Transcriptomic studies reveal that translation initiation inhibition activates a bZIP transcription factor ZIP-2-dependent innate immune response that protects C. elegans from P. aeruginosa infection. In contrast, inhibiting translation elongation triggers both ZIP-2-dependent and ZIP-2-independent immune responses that, while effective in clearing the infection, are detrimental to the host. Thus, our findings reveal the opposing roles of translation initiation and elongation inhibition in C. elegans survival during P. aeruginosa infection, highlighting distinct transcriptional reprogramming that may underlie these differences.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
1. To investigate the potential mechanisms behind the opposing effects of translation initiation and elongation inhibition, we performed RNA sequencing on N2 and zip-2(tm4248) animals following the knockdown of eif-2α (an initiation factor) and eft-2 (an elongation factor). 2. We measured the survival of various immune pathway mutants under translation elongation inhibition. 3. We have added colony-forming unit (CFU) analyses for N2 and all immunity mutants upon the knockdown of eif-2α, ifg-1, eef-1B.2, and eft-2 genes.





