Premium accounts now available! Sign up and create a premium account. Read more Close

Advertisement

Image

Neuroendocrine arylhydrocarbon receptor regulates gut microbiome of C. elegans via redox tone

Preprint Created on 23 Jun 2026 bioRxiv

The gut microbiome profoundly influences host health, with disrupted microbial communities implicated in inflammatory, metabolic, and neurological diseases. The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) shapes intestinal immunity and microbial composition, yet the mechanisms by which AHR mediates selective microbiome assembly remain poorly understood. Whether distant organ systems such as the nervous system actively participate in microbial community regulation is unexplored. Here we show that Caenorhabditis elegans neuronal AHR-1 orchestrates selective gut microbiome assembly through a neuroendocrine cascade that calibrates intestinal redox tone. Using a defined natural microbiome community, we demonstrate that ahr-1 loss triggers specific microbiome changes, as Enterobacterales and Pseudomonadales bloom up to 24-fold while Sphingobacteriales decline. Adult-specific AHR-1 depletion recapitulates this dysbiosis, separating the role of AHR-1 in neurodevelopment from its regulation of the microbiome. Neuronal AHR-1 regulates expression of the neuropeptide FLP-8 in oxygen-sensing URX neurons, which in turn signals to the intestine to modulate intestinal redox tone. Elevated intestinal redox tone in ahr-1 mutants favors growth of oxidative stress-tolerant Enterobacterales and Pseudomonadales, which also exhibit functional and genomic enrichment for stress resistance and AHR ligand biosynthesis pathways. This establishes a precise feedback circuit whereby AHR-1 senses bacterial metabolic output to regulate colonization by ligand-producing taxa. AHR-1 signaling regulates redox tone through downstream regulation of glutathione S-transferase GST-4 and alpha-arrestin ARRD-11. Intestinal gst-4 knockdowns had the greatest impact on restoring redox tone and microbiome compositional control in the gut. These findings reveal an evolutionarily ancient molecular circuit where AHR serves as a precision metabolic sensor that coordinates whole organismal physiology to maintain host-microbiome homeostasis.

Hosea, C., Assie, A., Zhang, F., Samuel, B. S.

Advertisement

Stats

  • Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
  • Views 2
  • Comments 0

Recommended by

  • No recommendations yet.

Post a comment

You need to be signed in to post comments. You can sign in here.

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Advertisement