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Hormetic heat stress and HSF-1 induce autophagy to improve survival and proteostasis in C. elegans

Caroline Kumsta, Jessica T. Chang, Jessica Schmalz, Malene Hansen

Nature Communications · 2017 · ▲ 289 citations

Abstract

Stress-response pathways have evolved to maintain cellular homeostasis and to ensure the survival of organisms under changing environmental conditions. Whereas severe stress is detrimental, mild stress can be beneficial for health and survival, known as hormesis. Although the universally conserved heat-shock response regulated by transcription factor HSF-1 has been implicated as an effector mechanism, the role and possible interplay with other cellular processes, such as autophagy(definition), remains poorly understood. Here we show that autophagy is induced in multiple tissues of Caenorhabditis elegans following hormetic heat stress or HSF-1 overexpression. Autophagy-related genes are required for the thermoresistance and longevity of animals exposed to hormetic heat shock or HSF-1 overexpression. Hormetic heat shock also reduces the progressive accumulation of PolyQ aggregates in an autophagy-dependent manner. These findings demonstrate that autophagy contributes to stress resistance and hormesis, and reveal a requirement for autophagy in HSF-1-regulated functions in the heat-shock response, proteostasis(definition) and ageing.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1038/ncomms14337
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2026-06-04 MST

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APA
Kumsta, C., Chang, J.T., Schmalz, J., &amp; Hansen, M. (2017). Hormetic heat stress and HSF-1 induce autophagy to improve survival and proteostasis in C. elegans. <em>Nature Communications</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14337
Vancouver
Kumsta C, Chang JT, Schmalz J, Hansen M. Hormetic heat stress and HSF-1 induce autophagy to improve survival and proteostasis in C. elegans. Nature Communications. 2017. doi:10.1038/ncomms14337.
BibTeX
@article{caroline2017Hormet, title = {Hormetic heat stress and HSF-1 induce autophagy to improve survival and proteostasis in C. elegans}, author = {Caroline Kumsta and Jessica T. Chang and Jessica Schmalz and Malene Hansen}, journal = {Nature Communications}, year = {2017}, doi = {10.1038/ncomms14337}, }

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