4.6 Article

Hydra's Lasting Partnership with Microbes: The Key for Escaping Senescence?

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10040774

Keywords

Hydra; lamin; aging; non-senescence; stem cells; microbiota; metaorganism; cancer

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [CRC 1182, 261376515-SFB 1182, CRC 1461, 434434223-SFB 1461]

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This article reviews key advances over the past decade in understanding the non-senescent lifestyle of Hydra, and concludes that the microbiome plays an important role in preventing pathogen invasion and maintaining stable tissue patterning mechanisms.
Aging results from a complex interplay between genetic endowment and environmental exposures during lifetime. As our understanding of the aging process progresses, so does the need for experimental animal models that allow a mechanistic understanding of the genetic and environmental factors involved. One such well-studied animal model is the freshwater polyp Hydra. Hydra are remarkable because they are non-senescent. Much of this non-senescence can be ascribed to a tissue consisting of stem cells with continuous self-renewal capacity. Another important fact is that Hydra's ectodermal epithelial surface is densely colonized by a stable multispecies bacterial community. The symbiotic partnership is driven by interactions among the microbiota and the host. Here, we review key advances over the last decade that are deepening our understanding of the genetic and environmental factors contributing to Hydra's non-senescent lifestyle. We conclude that the microbiome prevents pathobiont invasion (colonization resistance) and stabilizes the patterning mechanisms, and that microbiome malfunction negatively affects Hydra's continuous self-renewal capacity.

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