A FMRF-amide peptide that regulates cell non-autonomous protein homeostasis in C. elegans

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The coordination of protein homeostasis from the brain to periphery is essential for the health and survival of all animals. In C. elegans , glia serve a central role in coordinating organismal protein homeostasis and longevity via the unfolded protein response of the endoplasmic reticulum (UPR ER ). However, the full extent of the cell non-autonomous response and the identity of the signaling molecules required remained unknown. Here, we show that glial UPR ER activation induces robust transcriptomic changes in specific tissue types across the animal, particularly in pathways related to neuropeptide signaling. We performed neuropeptidomics and loss and gain-of-function genetic screens and identified a single neuropeptide, FLP-17, that is sufficient but not necessary to induce cell non-autonomous activation of the UPR ER . FLP-17 is sufficient to protect against chronic ER stress and age-dependent protein aggregation. We determined that FLP-17 acts through the receptor, EGL-6, to activate cell non-autonomous UPR ER . This work reveals a complex peptidergic signaling network initiated by glial activation of the UPR ER to regulate organismal protein homeostasis.

Article activity feed