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PGP-14 establishes a polar lipid permeability barrier within the C. elegans pharyngeal cuticle.

Muntasir KamalLevon TokmakjianJessica KnoxDuhyun HanHoutan MoshiriLilia MagomedovaKen Cq NguyenHong ZhengAndrew R BurnsBrittany CookeJessica LacosteMay YeoDavid H HallCarolyn L CumminsPeter J Roy
Published in: PLoS genetics (2023)
The cuticles of ecdysozoan animals are barriers to material loss and xenobiotic insult. Key to this barrier is lipid content, the establishment of which is poorly understood. Here, we show that the p-glycoprotein PGP-14 functions coincidently with the sphingomyelin synthase SMS-5 to establish a polar lipid barrier within the pharyngeal cuticle of the nematode C. elegans. We show that PGP-14 and SMS-5 are coincidentally expressed in the epithelium that surrounds the anterior pharyngeal cuticle where PGP-14 localizes to the apical membrane. pgp-14 and sms-5 also peak in expression at the time of new cuticle synthesis. Loss of PGP-14 and SMS-5 dramatically reduces pharyngeal cuticle staining by Nile Red, a key marker of polar lipids, and coincidentally alters the nematode's response to a wide-range of xenobiotics. We infer that PGP-14 exports polar lipids into the developing pharyngeal cuticle in an SMS-5-dependent manner to safeguard the nematode from environmental insult.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • ionic liquid
  • poor prognosis
  • endothelial cells
  • risk assessment
  • long non coding rna
  • climate change
  • binding protein