Tardigrades dramatically upregulate DNA repair pathway genes in response to ionizing radiation

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Abstract

Tardigrades can survive remarkable doses of ionizing radiation, up to about 1000 times the lethal dose for humans. How they do so is incompletely understood. We found that the tardigrade Hypsibius exemplaris suffers DNA damage upon gamma irradiation, but damage is repaired. We show that tardigrades have a specific and robust response to ionizing radiation: irradiation induces a rapid, dramatic upregulation of many DNA repair genes. By expressing tardigrade genes in bacteria, we validate that increased expression of some repair genes can suffice to increase radiation tolerance. We show that at least one such gene is necessary for tardigrade radiation tolerance. Tardigrades’ ability to sense ionizing radiation and massively upregulate specific DNA repair pathway genes may represent an evolved solution for maintaining DNA integrity.

One-Sentence Summary

Tardigrades exposed to ionizing radiation survive DNA damage by massively upregulating DNA repair pathway genes.

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  1. Excerpt

    What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger: @ArthropodQueen and team characterize a novel mechanism of ionizing radiation tolerance in the tardigrade H. exemplaris