Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Temperature-Dependent Regulation of Proteostasis and Longevity

Kavya Leo Vakkayil, Thorsten Hoppe

Frontiers in Aging · 2022 · ▲ 18 citations

Abstract

Temperature is an important environmental condition that determines the physiology and behavior of all organisms. Animals use different response strategies to adapt and survive fluctuations in ambient temperature. The hermaphrodite Caenorhabditis elegans has a well-studied neuronal network consisting of 302 neurons. The bilateral AFD neurons are the primary thermosensory neurons in the nematode. In addition to regulating thermosensitivity, AFD neurons also coordinate cellular stress responses through systemic mechanisms involving neuroendocrine signaling. Recent studies have examined the effects of temperature on altering various signaling pathways through specific gene expression programs that promote stress resistance and longevity. These studies challenge the proposed theories of temperature-dependent regulation of aging as a passive thermodynamic process. Instead, they provide evidence that aging is a well-defined genetic program. Loss of protein homeostasis (proteostasis(definition)) is one of the key telomere(definition) attrition, cellular senescence(definition))." style="text-decoration:underline dotted; text-underline-offset:2px; cursor:help;">hallmarks of aging(definition). Indeed, proteostasis pathways, such as the heat shock response and aggregation of metastable proteins, are also controlled by thermosensory neurons in C. elegans . Prolonged heat stress is thought to play a critical role in the development of neurodegenerative protein misfolding diseases in humans. This review presents the latest evidence on how temperature coordinates proteostasis and aging. It also discusses how studies of poikilothermic organisms can be applied to vertebrates and provides new therapeutic strategies for human disease.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.3389/fragi.2022.853588
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-03 MST

Cite this

APA
Vakkayil, K.L., &amp; Hoppe, T. (2022). Temperature-Dependent Regulation of Proteostasis and Longevity. <em>Frontiers in Aging</em>. https://doi.org/10.3389/fragi.2022.853588
Vancouver
Vakkayil KL, Hoppe T. Temperature-Dependent Regulation of Proteostasis and Longevity. Frontiers in Aging. 2022. doi:10.3389/fragi.2022.853588.
BibTeX
@article{kavya2022Temper, title = {Temperature-Dependent Regulation of Proteostasis and Longevity}, author = {Kavya Leo Vakkayil and Thorsten Hoppe}, journal = {Frontiers in Aging}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.3389/fragi.2022.853588}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings