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<journal-id journal-id-type="publisher">ptpbio</journal-id>
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<journal-title>Philos Theor Pract Biol</journal-title>
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<issn pub-type="epub">2475-3025</issn>
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<article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">2097</article-id>
<article-id pub-id-type="manuscript">Bazin-Host-published.docx</article-id>
<article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.3998/ptpbio.2097</article-id>
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<article-title>Host-Microbiota Co-immunity: An Intimate Relationship That Goes Beyond Protection</article-title>
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<contrib-id contrib-id-type="orcid">0000-0002-3262-3902</contrib-id>
<name>
<surname>Bazin</surname>
<given-names>Thomas</given-names>
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<email>thomas.bazin@aphp.fr</email>
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<xref rid="aff2" ref-type="aff">&#x2020;</xref>
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<contrib-id contrib-id-type="orcid">0000-0002-4412-9565</contrib-id>
<name>
<surname>Chiu</surname>
<given-names>Lynn</given-names>
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<contrib-id contrib-id-type="orcid">0000-0002-6590-3281</contrib-id>
<name>
<surname>Pradeu</surname>
<given-names>Thomas</given-names>
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<aff id="aff1"><label>&#x002A;</label>
<institution>UMR 1173 INSERM/University of Versailles-Saint-Quentin, University of Paris-Saclay, Montigny-le-Bretonneux, France</institution>
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<institution>UMR 1173 INSERM/University of Versailles-Saint-Quentin - University of Paris-Saclay, Montigny-le-Bretonneux, France</institution>
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<aff id="aff4"><label>&#x00A7;</label>
<institution>Institut d&#x2019;histoire and de philosophie des sciences and des techniques (UMR8590), CNRS &amp; Panth&#x00E9;on-Sorbonne University, France</institution>
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<pub-date>
<day>31</day>
<month>01</month>
<year>2022</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>14</volume>
<history>
<date date-type="received">
<day>02</day>
<month>08</month>
<year>2018</year>
</date>
<date date-type="rev-recd">
<day>20</day>
<month>02</month>
<year>2019</year>
</date>
<date date-type="accepted">
<day>24</day>
<month>02</month>
<year>2019</year>
</date>
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<license><license-p>CC BY 4.0</license-p></license>
</permissions>
<abstract id="ABS1">
<p id="P2b">Resident microorganisms, known as the microbiota, are essential for many physiological functions including protection against pathogens. Microbiota is indeed required for proper immune system development and function, and can also host-independently protect against infections. Thus, a co-constructed view of host protection involving both host and microbiota, named &#x201C;co-immunity,&#x201D; has been proposed, and the idea of an &#x201C;immunological holobiont&#x201D; has been suggested. Yet this view of co-immunity might be too limited, as experimental work has shown that the immune system is involved in functions other than protection, essentially development and repair. Microbiota, through co-immunity, is thereby most likely involved in these functions, although strong evidence is currently lacking. Moreover, as our point of view is mainly host-centered, we may miss the implications of co-immunity at broader scales, including cellular and population levels. Intriguingly, co-immunity effects could be beneficial for one function and/or one level, while being detrimental for others. All these elements should be taken into consideration for microbiota manipulation, in order to avoid potentially harmful side effects.</p>
</abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd>individuality</kwd>
<kwd>immunity</kwd>
<kwd>tissue repair</kwd>
<kwd>symbiosis</kwd>
<kwd>microbial ecology</kwd>
<kwd>colonization resistance</kwd>
<kwd>disease tolerance</kwd>
<kwd>containment</kwd>
</kwd-group>
<funding-group />
<counts>
<fig-count count="2" />
</counts>
<custom-meta-group>
<custom-meta id="competing-interest">
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</front>
<body>
<disp-quote content-type="epigraph"><p id="P1a">Part of a special issue, Contributed Papers from the Interdisciplinary Workshop on Holobionts, guest-edited by Derek Skillings.<sup>&#x00B6;</sup></p></disp-quote>
<sec id="S1">
<label>1</label><title>Introduction: From Immunity against Microbes to Co-Immunity between Hosts and Microbes</title>
<p id="P3">Microorganisms have long been considered as intrinsically and essentially harmful, and therefore as entities against which hosts must protect themselves. This has led to the concept that organisms isolate themselves from their microbial environment, and are protected against such microbial threats by their immune system, understood as a &#x201C;defense&#x201D; system (<xref rid="R7" ref-type="bibr">Burnet 1962</xref>; <xref rid="R13" ref-type="bibr">Clark 2008</xref>). Yet resident microorganisms are now clearly recognized as an integral and crucial part of our protective system against pathogens. Commensal bacteria, viruses, fungi and helminths can indeed protect their hosts against a variety of pathogens (<xref rid="R6" ref-type="bibr">Buffie and Pamer 2013</xref>; <xref rid="R3" ref-type="bibr">Belkaid and Hand 2014</xref>; <xref rid="R36" ref-type="bibr">Pamer 2016</xref>). We have recently proposed the label &#x201C;co-immunity&#x201D; for this host-microorganism partnership ensuring host protection against infectious diseases (<xref rid="R10" ref-type="bibr">Chiu et al. 2017</xref>).</p>
<p id="P4">In this short essay, we present our main arguments in favor of the idea of co-immunity, before showing that this concept must be expanded in two main directions, namely the influences of the microbiota on immune activities beyond mere protection, and on multiple levels of immune responses.</p>
<p id="P5">A few remarks about the vocabulary used in the present paper are in order. We define &#x201C;microbiota&#x201D; as all the resident microorganisms living in or on a host, regardless of the nature of their ecological interaction (parasitic, commensal, and mutualistic) with the host, their size, or taxonomic category (bacteria, viruses, fungi, or parasites such as helminths). In addition, we understand the notion of &#x201C;holobiont&#x201D; physiologically, as the collective entity composed by the host and its resident microbiota and displaying functions (in a systemic sense, <xref rid="R15" ref-type="bibr">Cummins 1975</xref>) realized jointly by the host and the microbiota (<xref rid="R11" ref-type="bibr">Chiu and Eberl 2016</xref>; <xref rid="R39" ref-type="bibr">Pradeu 2016</xref>). We do not claim that this collective entity is an evolutionary unit, contrary to the dominant (and disputed) use of the term &#x201C;holobiont&#x201D; (<xref rid="R50" ref-type="bibr">Vandenkoornhuyse et al. 2015</xref>; <xref rid="R5" ref-type="bibr">Bordenstein and Theis 2015</xref>; <xref rid="R18" ref-type="bibr">Douglas and Werren 2016</xref>; <xref rid="R45" ref-type="bibr">Skillings 2016</xref>; <xref rid="R17" ref-type="bibr">Doolittle and Booth 2017</xref>; <xref rid="R41" ref-type="bibr">Roughgarden et al. 2017</xref>), though it could qualify as an ecological unit (<xref rid="R23" ref-type="bibr">Hester et al. 2016</xref>). Moreover, the crux of our arguments concerns the details of how the microbiota influences immunity and these arguments apply to the intimate association between a host and its microbiota, whether or not one considers that such association qualifies as a &#x201C;holobiont.&#x201D;</p>
</sec>
<sec id="S2">
<label>2</label><title>What Is &#x201C;Co-immunity&#x201D;?</title>
<p id="P6">In a recent paper (<xref rid="R10" ref-type="bibr">Chiu et al. 2017</xref>), we have proposed the concept of &#x201C;co-immunity.&#x201D; This concept builds on previous knowledge about the potentially protective role of the microbiota (dealing mainly with localized colonization resistance), but also makes several steps further. Recent work has distinguished two main modes of microbiota-induced protection: a direct one via microbe-to-microbe interactions and an indirect one via activation by the microbiota of a host&#x2019;s immune system. For instance, probiotic <italic>Escherichiacoli</italic> (Nissle 1917) directly outcompetes commensal and pathogen <italic>Escherichia coli</italic> and <italic>Salmonella typhimurium</italic> via micromicin secretion (<xref rid="R43" ref-type="bibr">Sassone-Corsi et al. 2016</xref>), while protozoan <italic>Tritrichomonas musculis</italic> indirectly protects from gut <italic>S. typhimurium</italic> infection through the promotion of inflammatory Th1 and Th17 type immunity (<xref rid="R12" ref-type="bibr">Chudnovskiy et al. 2016</xref>). These two modes of protection are grouped together under the concept of &#x201C;colonization resistance,&#x201D; which refers to all forms of host-dependent or host-independent resistance to pathogens that are induced by the microbiota.</p>
<p id="P7">Still, this classic concept of microbiota-induced protection is too narrow for two reasons: on the one hand, the concept of colonization resistance is generally limited to a single protection strategy&#x2014;that is, the resistance against pathogens&#x2019; establishment and growth; on the other, protective effects are limited to the immediate vicinity of protective microbes. Thus, colonization resistance seems too limited to embrace the variety and complexity of microbiota-mediated protective effects.</p>
<p id="P8">First, other protective mechanisms than colonization resistance exist, namely <italic>containment</italic> and <italic>disease tolerance</italic>. Containment is the controlled localization of microbes within a particular site inside the host. For instance, in various organisms, bacteriophages that adhere to mucus glycoproteins can prevent translocation of bacteria, thus providing a host-independent localized protection of mucosal surfaces against bacterial infections (<xref rid="R2" ref-type="bibr">Barr et al. 2013</xref>). Disease tolerance is the limitation of host&#x2019;s tissue damage induced by pathogens, without pathogen elimination. As an illustration, <italic>Bacteroides fragilis</italic> in the gut affects systemic T-cell responses through the action of the bacterium-derived polysaccharide A, which protects against pathobiont <italic>Helicobater hepaticus</italic> colitis via the production of anti-inflammatory IL-10 by CD<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup> T cells and the promotion of regulatory T cells, without any effect on pathogen fitness or load (<xref rid="R32" ref-type="bibr">Mazmanian, Round, and Kasper 2008</xref>).</p>
<p id="P9">Second, microorganisms in one organ (mainly the gut) can influence immune responses in other organs. Long-reaching protective effects are less documented than local effects in the scientific literature, but convincing examples exist. For instance, mice challenged with pulmonary staphylococcal infection but lacking segmented filamentous bacteria in their gut microbiota show more severe infection with higher bacterial load and mortality, associated with diminished lung concentration of Th17 immune effector cells. Reintroduction of segmented filamentous bacteria is sufficient to restore protective effect (<xref rid="R21" ref-type="bibr">Gauguet et al. 2015</xref>).</p>
<p id="P10">Thus, we propose a systematic classification of
protective mechanisms that includes a broader range of protective
strategies than localized colonization resistance, distinguishing the modes (direct or indirect), the ranges (localized or long-reaching) and the effects (mechanisms) of protection (see <xref rid="F1" ref-type="fig">Figure 1</xref>). The notion of co-immunity that we propose (i.e., a form of immune protection associating components of several organisms), which in the present contexts combines components of the host and of the microbiota, includes all these different modes, ranges, and effects.</p>
<fig id="F1" position="float">
<label>Figure 1:</label>
<caption>
<p id="P27">An expanded view of microbe-conferred protection. Microorganisms can protect the host in different ways, depending on the mode of protection (direct ecological and indirect host-mediated), the effects of protection (colonization resistance against pathogenic establishment and growth, containment of pathogens and their effects, and disease tolerance of pathogens while suppressing their negative effects), and the range of protection (localized or long-reaching, with the latter further divided into protection that is systemic or from one locale to another locale). All three aspects of protection can occur in combination. Long-reaching protection, for instance, involves both direct (ecological) and indirect (host-mediated) modes of protection that result in colonization resistance, containment, or disease tolerance effects. Source: <italic>Frontiers in Immunology</italic> (<xref rid="R10" ref-type="bibr">Chiu et al. 2017</xref>).</p>
</caption>
<graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="ptpbio.2097-f0001.jpg"/>
</fig>
</sec>
<sec id="S3">
<label>3</label><title>Enriching the Concept of Co-Immunity in Terms of Activities and Levels</title>
<p id="P11">Despite the encompassing nature of the concept of co-immunity, we think it is still too limited, and must therefore be expanded in two main directions. First, immunity is not limited to protective strategies, and taking this fact into account extends significantly the implications of the concept of co-immunity. Second, co-immunity might concern other levels than just the individual organism.</p>
<sec id="S4">
<title>Co-immunity beyond protection</title>
<p id="P12">We previously defined co-immunity as a form of immune protection (<xref rid="R10" ref-type="bibr">Chiu et al. 2017</xref>). But what does &#x201C;defense&#x201D; exactly mean in this context? If we agree that to defend means to fight or to help to fight against an external aggression, which is the commonly accepted definition, colonization resistance and containment can be considered as defense mechanisms, acting as &#x201C;knights&#x201D;&#x2014;either using a &#x201C;shield&#x201D; (defense) or a &#x201C;sword&#x201D; (attack). But should disease tolerance be always considered as a defense mechanism? In the case of the inhibition of pathogenic toxins, for instance (<xref rid="R16" ref-type="bibr">de Sablet et al. 2009</xref>), it might be said so. But the toleration (rather than the destruction) of pathogens can be a cost-effective alternative when upkeep of pathogen fitness does not strongly decrease host fitness (e.g., when pathogen virulence is low), especially since the side effects of aggressive inflammatory immune responses are sometimes more damaging to the host than the &#x201C;infection&#x201D; itself. For instance, gut commensal <italic>Escherichia coli</italic> O21:H+ antagonizes muscle wasting during <italic>Burkholderia thailandensis</italic> or <italic>Salmonella typhimurium</italic> infections, without a negative impact on the fitness of these pathogens (<xref rid="R44" ref-type="bibr">Schieber et al. 2015</xref>). In this precise case, disease tolerance could act more like a wise gate-keeper than like a knight, away from a strictly speaking defense action, and sometimes paving the way for a potentially mutualistic relationship. Thus, it is more accurate to consider co-immunity as a form of immune <italic>protection</italic> against pathogens.</p>
<p id="P13">Moreover, we know that immunity is implicated in many other activities than protection alone. The immune system plays indeed a key role in development and tissue repair (<xref rid="R29" ref-type="bibr">Laurent et al. 2017</xref>; <xref rid="R49" ref-type="bibr">Truchetet and Pradeu 2018</xref>). Could co-immunity be implicated in developmentassociated and repair-associated activities?</p>
<p id="P14">The notion that animal development universally relies on microbial cues (developmental symbiosis) is gaining traction (<xref rid="R22" ref-type="bibr">Gilbert 2016</xref>). However, in most cases the three actors&#x2019; game between microbiota, immune system and development remains to be demonstrated, as for the most part what we have is correlations only. A much-studied bacterial symbiosis in the animal world is the association between the squid <italic>Euprymna scolopes</italic> and the bacterium <italic>Vibrio fischeri</italic>, where a crucial step of the squid&#x2019;s organogenesis relies on the presence of this particular bacterium. <italic>V. fischeri</italic> is specifically required for the <italic>E. scolopes</italic>&#x2019;s light organ to fully develop, which is to lose its superficial ciliated field. This action is linked with a direct interaction between tracheal cytotoxin (a fragment of the peptidoglycan) released by <italic>V. fischeri</italic> and epithelium-lined crypts of the light organ (<xref rid="R25" ref-type="bibr">Koropatnick et al. 2004</xref>). Pathways explaining developmental effects distant from this specific epithelium probably involve macrophage-like hemocytes that are recruited during <italic>V. fischeri</italic> colonization (<xref rid="R33" ref-type="bibr">McFall-Ngai, Nyholm, and Castillo 2010</xref>), suggesting that in the present case organogenesis relies on the interaction between a specific bacterium and the animal&#x2019;s immune system. Interestingly, microscopic examination of various squid tissues revealed that host hemocytes specifically migrate into the epithelial fields on the surface of the light organ before any signal of morphogenesis changes, suggesting a causal link between hemocyte modifications and organogenesis. Moreover, hemocyte gene expression correlates with the induction of light organ morphogenesis, suggesting that bacteria-induced molecular changes in the hemocytes are required for their developmental effects. However, direct impact of <italic>V. fischeri</italic> on hemocytes&#x2019; gene expression has yet to be demonstrated (<xref rid="R26" ref-type="bibr">Koropatnick, Kimbell, and McFall-Ngai 2007</xref>).</p>
<p id="P15">Microbiota in association with the immune system is also suspected to play a role in the development and the organization of the enteric nervous system (<xref rid="R35" ref-type="bibr">Obata and Pachnis 2016</xref>). For instance, in the network of the murine enteric nervous system, mucosal glial cells develop in response to gut microbiota, but it is unclear whether this is a consequence of direct glia sensing of microbial factors, or if it is instead mediated by the immune system (<xref rid="R51" ref-type="bibr">Veiga-Fernandes and Pachnis 2017</xref>). In humans, the microbiota is suspected to play a role in neurodevelopment, this having been particularly studied in autism (<xref rid="R24" ref-type="bibr">Kelly et al. 2017</xref>). Microglia development, maturation and function are influenced both prenatally and postnatally by the microbiota (<xref rid="R19" ref-type="bibr">Erny et al. 2015</xref>); as microglia contribute to brain development, microbiota could indirectly influence brain development (<xref rid="R47" ref-type="bibr">Thion et al. 2018</xref>), though more research is needed to entirely establish this claim.</p>
<p id="P16">Concerning repair, some studies show a beneficial role of particular species in healing intestinal ulcers and cutaneous infections (Lukic et al. 2017), potentially through systemic effects of beneficial bacteria, whereas others point to an accelerated and scarless skin healing in germ-free conditions (<xref rid="R8" ref-type="bibr">Canesso et al. 2014</xref>). Interestingly, the three-actors&#x2019; game between the microbiota, the immune system, and repair processes has begun to be deciphered. A link between the microbiota and intestinal repair was suspected after the discovery that toll-like receptor (TLR) activation by microbiota components is needed to promote tissue repair and host survival following acute injury (<xref rid="R40" ref-type="bibr">Rakoff-Nahoum et al. 2004</xref>). Moreover, Lai et al. showed that lipoteichoic acid, produced by skin commensal <italic>Staphylococcus epidermidis</italic>, can bind to TLR2, and thus mitigate inflammation, thereby promoting wound healing (<xref rid="R28" ref-type="bibr">Lai et al. 2009</xref>). More recently, Linehan et al. showed that a skin commensal can induce a specific T-cell response that accelerates skin wound healing, proving the implication of the immune system in microbiota modulation of tissue repair (<xref rid="R30" ref-type="bibr">Linehan et al. 2018</xref>). Notably, commensal-specific T-cells expressed repair signature genes and were different from pathogen-induced ones.</p>
<p id="P17">Together, these results suggest that the boundaries of our conceptual framework need to be extended, and raise a new question: If a microbe can modulate different immune functions, is there a possibility that what we call a pathogen because of its deleterious effect on one function could be beneficial in another immune function? And, conversely, can a protective microbe for one function be deleterious for another function? The latter is crucial for the safety of microbiota interventions.</p>
</sec>
<sec id="S5">
<title>Co-immunity beyond the level of the organism</title>
<p id="P18">Our vision of protection is usually centered on the level of the organism. Yet co-immunity could occur at different scales, both within and beyond the organism. This raises the question of whether pathogenic effects can impact differentially the various levels under consideration.</p>
<p id="P19">At the population scale, microbiota transmission could be implicated in social immunity in insects (<xref rid="R14" ref-type="bibr">Cremer, Armitage, and Schmid-Hempel 2007</xref>), and in &#x201C;herd immunity&#x201D; (<xref rid="R20" ref-type="bibr">Fine 1993</xref>) in humans and cattle, whose prototypical example is vaccination. Social immunization&#x2014;that is, the inter-individual transmission of protective properties against pathogens&#x2014;is a part of social immunity and has been observed in <italic>Zootermopsis angusticollis</italic> termite (<xref rid="R48" ref-type="bibr">Traniello, Rosengaus, and Savoie 2002</xref>) and in <italic>Bombus terrestris</italic> bumblebee (<xref rid="R42" ref-type="bibr">Sadd et al. 2005</xref>). The precise mechanisms are unknown, and they cannot involve antibody transmission in invertebrate animals (<xref rid="R34" ref-type="bibr">Moret and Schmid-Hempel 2001</xref>). As microbiota transmission is strongly favored by sociality (<xref rid="R27" ref-type="bibr">Kwong and Moran 2016</xref>), it could be the vector of this sort of social immunity.</p>
<p id="P20">In humans, the carcinogenic effect of <italic>Helicobacterpylori</italic> on gastric mucosa is well-known, but at the organism scale <italic>H.pylori</italic> infection is associated with a protection against tuberculosis (<xref rid="R37" ref-type="bibr">Perry et al. 2010</xref>), which can hypothetically modify the transmission of infection at the population level. It is also plausible that a peculiar component of the microbiota could protect one host from the damages induced by a pathogen, for instance by inducing disease tolerance, thereby encouraging its growth and transmission and decreasing population&#x2019;s fitness, though evidence for such a phenomenon is currently lacking. In the opposite way, a particular component of the microbiota could increase community fitness, while disadvantaging predisposed hosts (altruistic immunity).</p>
<p id="P21">Within a multicellular organism, it is perfectly plausible that a bacterium hosts a phage that protects the bacterium against pathogens (which means that there is a co-immunity between the bacterium and the phage), but this association weakens the immune protection of the multicellular host against a given pathogenic threat in a given context. It is also conceivable (though no evidence currently exists for this, to our knowledge) that an intracellular microorganism increases cell-intrinsic immunity (i.e., immunity at the level of a cell, e.g., <xref rid="R4" ref-type="bibr">Bieniasz 2004</xref>; <xref rid="R52" ref-type="bibr">Yan and Chen 2012</xref>; <xref rid="R1" ref-type="bibr">Ablasser et al. 2013</xref>), at the expense of the immune response of the whole organism against a given pathogen. This could happen in plants, for example, where immunity is to a large extent dependent on cell-intrinsic processes, making the coordination of these cellular responses at the higher level of the organism quite complicated (<xref rid="R46" ref-type="bibr">Szittya and Burgy&#x00E1;n 2013</xref>). Other interesting cases of conflicts between levels of co-immunity could include organisms that transition from a unicellular to a multicellular stage, with the emergence of collective immunity at the multicellular level, like <italic>Dictyostelium discoideum</italic> (<xref rid="R9" ref-type="bibr">Chen, Zhuchenko, and Kuspa 2007</xref>). Here again, one could imagine an intracellular symbiont favoring the immune protection of a cell within the multicellular slug, but detrimental to immune protection of the slug as a whole against a given pathogen. Though speculative, these considerations are plausible, and it is likely that the lack of evidence about such phenomena is to a large extent due to lack of investigations based on these exact questions.</p>
</sec>
</sec>
<sec id="S6">
<label>4</label><title>Conclusion</title>
<p id="P22">The immune system is so dependent on its interactions with the microbiota for its development and functioning that the &#x201C;pure&#x201D; eukaryote-only concept of immunity seems to progressively vanish. In parallel, &#x201C;host-independent&#x201D; immune protection is very relative, as microbiota composition is actively modulated by the immune system. Thus, it seems essential to adopt a co-constructed view of immunity (according to which immunity is the product of the intricate contribution of both the host and the microbiota).</p>
<p id="P23">An open and perhaps slightly provocative question is
whether it is useful to continue to use the term
&#x201C;immunity&#x201D; alone, or if this term should be completely replaced by that of &#x201C;co-immunity&#x201D; (see <xref rid="F2" ref-type="fig">Figure 2</xref>). It becomes increasingly clear that the microbiota has some influence on all types of immunological responses (including different cell types, different bodily compartments, and different immunological &#x201C;functions&#x201D;&#x2014;including protection, repair, and development). Our expanded view of co-immunity gives credence to the notion of an &#x201C;immunological holobiont&#x201D; (<xref rid="R39" ref-type="bibr">Pradeu 2016</xref>; <xref rid="R38" ref-type="bibr">Postler and Ghosh 2017</xref>), without again assuming that this entity constitutes an evolutionary unit.</p>
<fig id="F2" position="float">
<label>Figure 2:</label>
<caption>
<p id="P28">Conceptual transition from colonization resistance as a peripheral part of our understanding of immunity to co-immunity as an integrated sub-part of immunity, and finally to co-immunity alone.</p>
</caption>
<graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="ptpbio.2097-f0002.jpg"/>
</fig>
<p id="P24">It might be possible to object to our argument here that the vision of the immune system as multifunctional is not consensual, and that evidence concerning development and repair mediated by a dialogue between the immune system and the microbiota is scarce. In response, we would say that recent research does seem to point in that direction and that, as philosophers and medical doctors involved in microbiota research, our aim is mainly to try to open up original avenues for future research. We suggest that testing the potential beneficial effects of a new bug should be accompanied by a broad reflection about its impact on all immune functions (not just protection against infections), at different scales (not just that of the organism), and in different contexts. This expanded view of co-immunity should also be combined with a switch from a host-centric view (as is usually the case in discussions over &#x201C;holobionts&#x201D;) to a microbe-centric view. This switch is likely to further enrich the co-constructed view of immunity that we have tried to propose in this essay.</p>
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<ack id="S7">
<title>Acknowledgments</title>
<p id="P25">We would like to thank Nadine Cerf-Bensussan, Laurence Delhaes, G&#x00E9;rard Eberl, Bruno Lemaitre, Thierry Schaeverbeke, Philippe Sansonetti, and Marie-Elise Truchetet for discussions. L. C. and T. P. have received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union&#x2019;s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programm, grant agreement n&#x00B0; 637647 &#x2014; IDEM.</p>
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<fn-group>
<p id="P85">&#x00A9; 2022 Author(s)</p>
<p id="P44">This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license, which permits anyone to download, copy, distribute, display, or adapt the text without asking for permission, provided that the creator(s) are given full credit.</p>
<p id="P29">&#x00B6; The Interdisciplinary Workshop on Holobionts was held in Bordeaux, November 6&#x2013;8, 2017, and received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union&#x2019;s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, grant agreement #637647.</p>
</fn-group>
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