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A functional study of all 40 Caenorhabditis elegans insulin-like peptides.

Shanqing ZhengHilton ChiuJeffrey BoudreauTony PapanicolaouWilliam BendenaIan D Chin-Sang
Published in: The Journal of biological chemistry (2018)
The human genome encodes 10 insulin-like genes, whereas the Caenorhabditis elegans genome remarkably encodes 40 insulin-like genes. Knockout strategies to determine the roles of all the insulin/insulin-like peptide ligands (INS) in C. elegans has been challenging due to functional redundancy. Here, we individually overexpressed each of the 40 ins genes pan-neuronally, and monitored multiple phenotypes including: L1 arrest life span, neuroblast divisions under L1 arrest, dauer formation, and fat accumulation, as readouts to characterize the functions of each INS in vivo Of the 40 INS peptides, we found functions for 35 INS peptides and functionally categorized each as agonists, antagonists, or of pleiotropic function. In particular, we found that 9 of 16 agonistic INS peptides shortened L1 arrest life span and promoted neuroblast divisions during L1 arrest. Our study revealed that a subset of β-class INS peptides that contain a distinct F peptide sequence are agonists. Our work is the first to categorize the structures of INS peptides and relate these structures to the functions of all 40 INS peptides in vivo Our findings will promote the study of insulin function on development, metabolism, and aging-related diseases.
Keyphrases
  • type diabetes
  • genome wide
  • glycemic control
  • amino acid
  • cell cycle
  • endothelial cells
  • high resolution
  • metabolic syndrome
  • gene expression