|
Metabolic Plasticity Sustains the Robustness of Caenorhabditis Elegans Embryogenesis
Siyu Chen, Xing Su, Jinglin Zhu, Long Xiao, Yulin Cong, Leilei Yang, Zhuo Du, Xun Huang
EMBO Reports
Abstract
Embryogenesis is highly dependent on maternally loaded materials, particularly those used for energy production. Different environmental conditions and genetic backgrounds shape embryogenesis. The robustness of embryogenesis in response to extrinsic and intrinsic changes remains incompletely understood. By analyzing the levels of two major nutrients, glycogen and neutral lipids, we discovered stage-dependent usage of these two nutrients along with mitochondrial morphology changes during Caenorhabditis elegans embryogenesis. ATGL, the rate-limiting lipase in cellular lipolysis, is expressed and required in the hypodermis to regulate mitochondrial function and support embryogenesis. The embryonic lethality of atgl-1 mutants can be suppressed by reducing sinh-1/age-1-akt signaling, likely through modulating glucose metabolism to maintain sustainable glucose consumption. The embryonic lethality of atgl-1(xd314) is also affected by parental nutrition. Parental glucose and oleic acid supplements promote glycogen storage in atgl-1(xd314) embryos to compensate for the impaired lipolysis. The rescue by parental vitamin B12 supplement is likely through enhancing mitochondrial function in atgl-1 mutants. These findings reveal that metabolic plasticity contributes to the robustness of C. elegans embryogenesis.
|
论文编号: |
DOI:10.15252/embr.202357440 |
论文题目: |
Metabolic Plasticity Sustains the Robustness of Caenorhabditis Elegans Embryogenesis |
英文论文题目: |
Metabolic Plasticity Sustains the Robustness of Caenorhabditis Elegans Embryogenesis |
第一作者: |
Siyu Chen, Xing Su, Jinglin Zhu, Long Xiao, Yulin Cong, Leilei Yang, Zhuo Du, Xun Huang |
英文第一作者: |
Siyu Chen, Xing Su, Jinglin Zhu, Long Xiao, Yulin Cong, Leilei Yang, Zhuo Du, Xun Huang |
联系作者: |
|
英文联系作者: |
|
外单位作者单位: |
|
英文外单位作者单位: |
|
发表年度: |
2023-10-30 |
卷: |
|
期: |
|
页码: |
|
摘要: |
Embryogenesis is highly dependent on maternally loaded materials, particularly those used for energy production. Different environmental conditions and genetic backgrounds shape embryogenesis. The robustness of embryogenesis in response to extrinsic and intrinsic changes remains incompletely understood. By analyzing the levels of two major nutrients, glycogen and neutral lipids, we discovered stage-dependent usage of these two nutrients along with mitochondrial morphology changes during Caenorhabditis elegans embryogenesis. ATGL, the rate-limiting lipase in cellular lipolysis, is expressed and required in the hypodermis to regulate mitochondrial function and support embryogenesis. The embryonic lethality of atgl-1 mutants can be suppressed by reducing sinh-1/age-1-akt signaling, likely through modulating glucose metabolism to maintain sustainable glucose consumption. The embryonic lethality of atgl-1(xd314) is also affected by parental nutrition. Parental glucose and oleic acid supplements promote glycogen storage in atgl-1(xd314) embryos to compensate for the impaired lipolysis. The rescue by parental vitamin B12 supplement is likely through enhancing mitochondrial function in atgl-1 mutants. These findings reveal that metabolic plasticity contributes to the robustness of C. elegans embryogenesis. |
英文摘要: |
Embryogenesis is highly dependent on maternally loaded materials, particularly those used for energy production. Different environmental conditions and genetic backgrounds shape embryogenesis. The robustness of embryogenesis in response to extrinsic and intrinsic changes remains incompletely understood. By analyzing the levels of two major nutrients, glycogen and neutral lipids, we discovered stage-dependent usage of these two nutrients along with mitochondrial morphology changes during Caenorhabditis elegans embryogenesis. ATGL, the rate-limiting lipase in cellular lipolysis, is expressed and required in the hypodermis to regulate mitochondrial function and support embryogenesis. The embryonic lethality of atgl-1 mutants can be suppressed by reducing sinh-1/age-1-akt signaling, likely through modulating glucose metabolism to maintain sustainable glucose consumption. The embryonic lethality of atgl-1(xd314) is also affected by parental nutrition. Parental glucose and oleic acid supplements promote glycogen storage in atgl-1(xd314) embryos to compensate for the impaired lipolysis. The rescue by parental vitamin B12 supplement is likely through enhancing mitochondrial function in atgl-1 mutants. These findings reveal that metabolic plasticity contributes to the robustness of C. elegans embryogenesis. |
刊物名称: |
EMBO Reports |
英文刊物名称: |
EMBO Reports |
论文全文: |
|
英文论文全文: |
|
全文链接: |
|
其它备注: |
|
英文其它备注: |
|
学科: |
|
英文学科: |
|
影响因子: |
|
第一作者所在部门: |
|
英文第一作者所在部门: |
|
论文出处: |
|
英文论文出处: |
|
论文类别: |
|
英文论文类别: |
|
参与作者: |
|
英文参与作者: |
|
|