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Hypodermal responses to protein synthesis inhibition induce systemic developmental arrest and AMPK-dependent survival in Caenorhabditis elegans
Hans M. Dalton, Sean P. Curran
PLoS Genetics · 2018 · ▲ 48 citations
Abstract
Across organisms, manipulation of biosynthetic capacity arrests development early in life, but can increase health- and lifespan post-developmentally. Here we demonstrate that this developmental arrest is not sickness but rather a regulated survival program responding to reduced cellular performance. We inhibited protein synthesis by reducing ribosome biogenesis (rps-11/RPS11 RNAi), translation initiation (ifg-1/EIF3G mutation and egl-45/EIF3A RNAi), or ribosome progression (cycloheximide treatment), all of which result in a specific arrest at larval stage 2 of C. elegans development. This quiescent state can last for weeks-beyond the normal C. elegans adult lifespan-and is reversible, as animals can resume reproduction and live a normal lifespan once released from the source of protein synthesis inhibition. The arrest state affords resistance to thermal, oxidative, and heavy metal stress exposure. In addition to cell-autonomous responses, reducing biosynthetic capacity only in the hypodermis was sufficient to drive organism-level developmental arrest and stress resistance phenotypes. Among the cell non-autonomous responses to protein synthesis inhibition is reduced pharyngeal pumping that is dependent upon AMPK-mediated signaling. The reduced pharyngeal pumping in response to protein synthesis inhibition is recapitulated by exposure to microbes that generate protein synthesis-inhibiting xenobiotics, which may mechanistically reduce ingestion of pathogen and toxin. These data define the existence of a transient arrest-survival state in response to protein synthesis inhibition and provide an evolutionary foundation for the conserved enhancement of healthy aging observed in post-developmental animals with reduced biosynthetic capacity.
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- 10.1371/journal.pgen.1007520
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- 2026-06-10 MST
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APA
Dalton, H.M., & Curran, S.P. (2018). Hypodermal responses to protein synthesis inhibition induce systemic developmental arrest and AMPK-dependent survival in Caenorhabditis elegans. <em>PLoS Genetics</em>. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007520
Vancouver
Dalton HM, Curran SP. Hypodermal responses to protein synthesis inhibition induce systemic developmental arrest and AMPK-dependent survival in Caenorhabditis elegans. PLoS Genetics. 2018. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1007520.
BibTeX
@article{hans2018Hypode,
title = {Hypodermal responses to protein synthesis inhibition induce systemic developmental arrest and AMPK-dependent survival in Caenorhabditis elegans},
author = {Hans M. Dalton and Sean P. Curran},
journal = {PLoS Genetics},
year = {2018},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1007520},
}
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