RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Bacterial derived vitamin B12 enhances predatory behaviors in nematodes JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 797803 DO 10.1101/797803 A1 Nermin Akduman A1 James W. Lightfoot A1 Waltraud Röseler A1 Hanh Witte A1 Wen-Sui Lo A1 Christian Rödelsperger A1 Ralf J. Sommer YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/10/08/797803.abstract AB The microbiome is known to affect host development, metabolism and immunity, however, its impact on behaviors is only beginning to be understood. Here, we investigate how bacteria modulate complex behaviors in the nematode model organism Pristionchus pacificus. P. pacificus is a predator feeding on the larvae of other nematodes including Caenorhabditis elegans. Growing P. pacificus on different bacteria and testing their ability to kill C. elegans reveals drastic differences in killing efficiencies with a Novosphingobium species showing the strongest enhancement. Strikingly, increased killing was not accompanied by an increase in feeding, a phenomenon known as surplus-killing whereby predators kill more prey than necessary for sustenance. RNA-seq revealed widespread metabolic rewiring upon exposure to Novosphingobium, which facilitated the screening for bacterial mutants leading to an altered transcriptional response. This identified bacterial derived vitamin B12 as a major micronutrient enhancing predatory behaviors. Vitamin B12 is an essential cofactor for detoxification and metabolite biosynthesis and has previously been shown to accelerate development in C. elegans. In P. pacificus vitamin B12 supplementation amplified, whereas mutants in vitamin B12-dependent pathways reduced surplus-killing. This demonstrates that bacterial vitamin B12 affects complex behaviors and thus establishes a connection between microbial diet and the nervous system.