Lysosome-related organelles promote stress and immune responses in C. elegans.
Gábor HajdúMilán SomogyváriPéter CsermelyCsaba SőtiPublished in: Communications biology (2023)
Lysosome-related organelles (LROs) play diverse roles and their dysfunction causes immunodeficiency. However, their primordial functions remain unclear. Here, we report that C. elegans LROs (gut granules) promote organismal defenses against various stresses. We find that toxic benzaldehyde exposure induces LRO autofluorescence, stimulates the expression of LRO-specific genes and enhances LRO transport capacity as well as increases tolerance to benzaldehyde, heat and oxidative stresses, while these responses are impaired in glo-1/Rab32 and pgp-2 ABC transporter LRO biogenesis mutants. Benzaldehyde upregulates glo-1- and pgp-2-dependent expression of heat shock, detoxification and antimicrobial effector genes, which requires daf-16/FOXO and/or pmk-1/p38MAPK. Finally, benzaldehyde preconditioning increases resistance against Pseudomonas aeruginosa PA14 in a glo-1- and pgp-2-dependent manner, and PA14 infection leads to the deposition of fluorescent metabolites in LROs and induction of LRO genes. Our study suggests that LROs may play a role in systemic responses to stresses and in pathogen resistance.
Keyphrases
- heat shock
- poor prognosis
- genome wide
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- immune response
- living cells
- heat stress
- bioinformatics analysis
- genome wide identification
- fluorescent probe
- dendritic cells
- oxidative stress
- binding protein
- ms ms
- genome wide analysis
- long non coding rna
- heat shock protein
- signaling pathway
- candida albicans
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- dna methylation
- quantum dots
- regulatory t cells
- multidrug resistant
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- drug resistant