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A Shift to Organismal Stress Resistance in Programmed Cell Death Mutants

Animals have many ways of protecting themselves against stress; for example, they can induce animal-wide, stress-protective pathways and they can kill damaged cells via apoptosis. We have discovered an unexpected regulatory relationship between these two types of stress responses. We find that C. el...

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Autores principales: Judy, Meredith E., Nakamura, Ayumi, Huang, Anne, Grant, Harli, McCurdy, Helen, Weiberth, Kurt F., Gao, Fuying, Coppola, Giovanni, Kenyon, Cynthia, Kao, Aimee W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3778000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24068943
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003714
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author Judy, Meredith E.
Nakamura, Ayumi
Huang, Anne
Grant, Harli
McCurdy, Helen
Weiberth, Kurt F.
Gao, Fuying
Coppola, Giovanni
Kenyon, Cynthia
Kao, Aimee W.
author_facet Judy, Meredith E.
Nakamura, Ayumi
Huang, Anne
Grant, Harli
McCurdy, Helen
Weiberth, Kurt F.
Gao, Fuying
Coppola, Giovanni
Kenyon, Cynthia
Kao, Aimee W.
author_sort Judy, Meredith E.
collection PubMed
description Animals have many ways of protecting themselves against stress; for example, they can induce animal-wide, stress-protective pathways and they can kill damaged cells via apoptosis. We have discovered an unexpected regulatory relationship between these two types of stress responses. We find that C. elegans mutations blocking the normal course of programmed cell death and clearance confer animal-wide resistance to a specific set of environmental stressors; namely, ER, heat and osmotic stress. Remarkably, this pattern of stress resistance is induced by mutations that affect cell death in different ways, including ced-3 (cell death defective) mutations, which block programmed cell death, ced-1 and ced-2 mutations, which prevent the engulfment of dying cells, and progranulin (pgrn-1) mutations, which accelerate the clearance of apoptotic cells. Stress resistance conferred by ced and pgrn-1 mutations is not additive and these mutants share altered patterns of gene expression, suggesting that they may act within the same pathway to achieve stress resistance. Together, our findings demonstrate that programmed cell death effectors influence the degree to which C. elegans tolerates environmental stress. While the mechanism is not entirely clear, it is intriguing that animals lacking the ability to efficiently and correctly remove dying cells should switch to a more global animal-wide system of stress resistance.
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spelling pubmed-37780002013-09-25 A Shift to Organismal Stress Resistance in Programmed Cell Death Mutants Judy, Meredith E. Nakamura, Ayumi Huang, Anne Grant, Harli McCurdy, Helen Weiberth, Kurt F. Gao, Fuying Coppola, Giovanni Kenyon, Cynthia Kao, Aimee W. PLoS Genet Research Article Animals have many ways of protecting themselves against stress; for example, they can induce animal-wide, stress-protective pathways and they can kill damaged cells via apoptosis. We have discovered an unexpected regulatory relationship between these two types of stress responses. We find that C. elegans mutations blocking the normal course of programmed cell death and clearance confer animal-wide resistance to a specific set of environmental stressors; namely, ER, heat and osmotic stress. Remarkably, this pattern of stress resistance is induced by mutations that affect cell death in different ways, including ced-3 (cell death defective) mutations, which block programmed cell death, ced-1 and ced-2 mutations, which prevent the engulfment of dying cells, and progranulin (pgrn-1) mutations, which accelerate the clearance of apoptotic cells. Stress resistance conferred by ced and pgrn-1 mutations is not additive and these mutants share altered patterns of gene expression, suggesting that they may act within the same pathway to achieve stress resistance. Together, our findings demonstrate that programmed cell death effectors influence the degree to which C. elegans tolerates environmental stress. While the mechanism is not entirely clear, it is intriguing that animals lacking the ability to efficiently and correctly remove dying cells should switch to a more global animal-wide system of stress resistance. Public Library of Science 2013-09-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3778000/ /pubmed/24068943 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003714 Text en © 2013 Judy et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Judy, Meredith E.
Nakamura, Ayumi
Huang, Anne
Grant, Harli
McCurdy, Helen
Weiberth, Kurt F.
Gao, Fuying
Coppola, Giovanni
Kenyon, Cynthia
Kao, Aimee W.
A Shift to Organismal Stress Resistance in Programmed Cell Death Mutants
title A Shift to Organismal Stress Resistance in Programmed Cell Death Mutants
title_full A Shift to Organismal Stress Resistance in Programmed Cell Death Mutants
title_fullStr A Shift to Organismal Stress Resistance in Programmed Cell Death Mutants
title_full_unstemmed A Shift to Organismal Stress Resistance in Programmed Cell Death Mutants
title_short A Shift to Organismal Stress Resistance in Programmed Cell Death Mutants
title_sort shift to organismal stress resistance in programmed cell death mutants
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3778000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24068943
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003714
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