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Defects in the C. elegans acyl-CoA Synthase, acs-3, and Nuclear Hormone Receptor, nhr-25, Cause Sensitivity to Distinct, but Overlapping Stresses

Metazoan transcription factors control distinct networks of genes in specific tissues, yet understanding how these networks are integrated into physiology, development, and homeostasis remains challenging. Inactivation of the nuclear hormone receptor nhr-25 ameliorates developmental and metabolic ph...

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Autores principales: Ward, Jordan D., Mullaney, Brendan, Schiller, Benjamin J., He, Le D., Petnic, Sarah E., Couillault, Carole, Pujol, Nathalie, Bernal, Teresita U., Van Gilst, Marc R., Ashrafi, Kaveh, Ewbank, Jonathan J., Yamamoto, Keith R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3961378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24651852
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0092552
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author Ward, Jordan D.
Mullaney, Brendan
Schiller, Benjamin J.
He, Le D.
Petnic, Sarah E.
Couillault, Carole
Pujol, Nathalie
Bernal, Teresita U.
Van Gilst, Marc R.
Ashrafi, Kaveh
Ewbank, Jonathan J.
Yamamoto, Keith R.
author_facet Ward, Jordan D.
Mullaney, Brendan
Schiller, Benjamin J.
He, Le D.
Petnic, Sarah E.
Couillault, Carole
Pujol, Nathalie
Bernal, Teresita U.
Van Gilst, Marc R.
Ashrafi, Kaveh
Ewbank, Jonathan J.
Yamamoto, Keith R.
author_sort Ward, Jordan D.
collection PubMed
description Metazoan transcription factors control distinct networks of genes in specific tissues, yet understanding how these networks are integrated into physiology, development, and homeostasis remains challenging. Inactivation of the nuclear hormone receptor nhr-25 ameliorates developmental and metabolic phenotypes associated with loss of function of an acyl-CoA synthetase gene, acs-3. ACS-3 activity prevents aberrantly high NHR-25 activity. Here, we investigated this relationship further by examining gene expression patterns following acs-3 and nhr-25 inactivation. Unexpectedly, we found that the acs-3 mutation or nhr-25 RNAi resulted in similar transcriptomes with enrichment in innate immunity and stress response gene expression. Mutants of either gene exhibited distinct sensitivities to pathogens and environmental stresses. Only nhr-25 was required for wild-type levels of resistance to the bacterial pathogen P. aeruginosa and only acs-3 was required for wild-type levels of resistance to osmotic stress and the oxidative stress generator, juglone. Inactivation of either acs-3 or nhr-25 compromised lifespan and resistance to the fungal pathogen D. coniospora. Double mutants exhibited more severe defects in the lifespan and P. aeruginosa assays, but were similar to the single mutants in other assays. Finally, acs-3 mutants displayed defects in their epidermal surface barrier, potentially accounting for the observed sensitivities. Together, these data indicate that inactivation of either acs-3 or nhr-25 causes stress sensitivity and increased expression of innate immunity/stress genes, most likely by different mechanisms. Elevated expression of these immune/stress genes appears to abrogate the transcriptional signatures relevant to metabolism and development.
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spelling pubmed-39613782014-03-24 Defects in the C. elegans acyl-CoA Synthase, acs-3, and Nuclear Hormone Receptor, nhr-25, Cause Sensitivity to Distinct, but Overlapping Stresses Ward, Jordan D. Mullaney, Brendan Schiller, Benjamin J. He, Le D. Petnic, Sarah E. Couillault, Carole Pujol, Nathalie Bernal, Teresita U. Van Gilst, Marc R. Ashrafi, Kaveh Ewbank, Jonathan J. Yamamoto, Keith R. PLoS One Research Article Metazoan transcription factors control distinct networks of genes in specific tissues, yet understanding how these networks are integrated into physiology, development, and homeostasis remains challenging. Inactivation of the nuclear hormone receptor nhr-25 ameliorates developmental and metabolic phenotypes associated with loss of function of an acyl-CoA synthetase gene, acs-3. ACS-3 activity prevents aberrantly high NHR-25 activity. Here, we investigated this relationship further by examining gene expression patterns following acs-3 and nhr-25 inactivation. Unexpectedly, we found that the acs-3 mutation or nhr-25 RNAi resulted in similar transcriptomes with enrichment in innate immunity and stress response gene expression. Mutants of either gene exhibited distinct sensitivities to pathogens and environmental stresses. Only nhr-25 was required for wild-type levels of resistance to the bacterial pathogen P. aeruginosa and only acs-3 was required for wild-type levels of resistance to osmotic stress and the oxidative stress generator, juglone. Inactivation of either acs-3 or nhr-25 compromised lifespan and resistance to the fungal pathogen D. coniospora. Double mutants exhibited more severe defects in the lifespan and P. aeruginosa assays, but were similar to the single mutants in other assays. Finally, acs-3 mutants displayed defects in their epidermal surface barrier, potentially accounting for the observed sensitivities. Together, these data indicate that inactivation of either acs-3 or nhr-25 causes stress sensitivity and increased expression of innate immunity/stress genes, most likely by different mechanisms. Elevated expression of these immune/stress genes appears to abrogate the transcriptional signatures relevant to metabolism and development. Public Library of Science 2014-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3961378/ /pubmed/24651852 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0092552 Text en © 2014 Ward 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
Ward, Jordan D.
Mullaney, Brendan
Schiller, Benjamin J.
He, Le D.
Petnic, Sarah E.
Couillault, Carole
Pujol, Nathalie
Bernal, Teresita U.
Van Gilst, Marc R.
Ashrafi, Kaveh
Ewbank, Jonathan J.
Yamamoto, Keith R.
Defects in the C. elegans acyl-CoA Synthase, acs-3, and Nuclear Hormone Receptor, nhr-25, Cause Sensitivity to Distinct, but Overlapping Stresses
title Defects in the C. elegans acyl-CoA Synthase, acs-3, and Nuclear Hormone Receptor, nhr-25, Cause Sensitivity to Distinct, but Overlapping Stresses
title_full Defects in the C. elegans acyl-CoA Synthase, acs-3, and Nuclear Hormone Receptor, nhr-25, Cause Sensitivity to Distinct, but Overlapping Stresses
title_fullStr Defects in the C. elegans acyl-CoA Synthase, acs-3, and Nuclear Hormone Receptor, nhr-25, Cause Sensitivity to Distinct, but Overlapping Stresses
title_full_unstemmed Defects in the C. elegans acyl-CoA Synthase, acs-3, and Nuclear Hormone Receptor, nhr-25, Cause Sensitivity to Distinct, but Overlapping Stresses
title_short Defects in the C. elegans acyl-CoA Synthase, acs-3, and Nuclear Hormone Receptor, nhr-25, Cause Sensitivity to Distinct, but Overlapping Stresses
title_sort defects in the c. elegans acyl-coa synthase, acs-3, and nuclear hormone receptor, nhr-25, cause sensitivity to distinct, but overlapping stresses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3961378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24651852
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0092552
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