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Series GSE69329 Query DataSets for GSE69329
Status Public on May 27, 2016
Title dbl-1/TGF-β and daf-12/NHR signaling mediate cell-nonautonomous effects of daf-16/FOXO on starvation-induced developmental arrest
Organism Caenorhabditis elegans
Experiment type Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Summary Post-embryonic development of the nematode C. elegans is governed by nutrient availability. L1-stage larvae remain in a state of developmental arrest after hatching until they feed. This “L1 arrest” (or "L1 diapause") is associated with increased stress resistance, supporting starvation survival. Loss of the transcription factor daf-16/FOXO, an effector of insulin/IGF signaling, results in arrest-defective and starvation-sensitive phenotypes. We show that daf-16/FOXO regulates L1 arrest cell-nonautonomously, suggesting that insulin/IGF signaling regulates at least one additional signaling pathway. We used mRNA-seq to identify candidate signaling molecules affected by daf-16/FOXO during L1 arrest. daf-16/FOXO had overlapping but distinct effects on gene expression in L1 arrest compared to daf-2/InsR adults. Notably, dbl-1/TGF-β, a ligand for the Sma/Mab pathway, and daf-36, which encodes an upstream component of the daf-12/NHR steroid hormone signaling pathway, were up-regulated during L1 arrest in a daf-16/FOXO mutant. Using genetic epistasis analysis, we show that dbl-1/TGF-β and daf-12/NHR steroid hormone signaling pathways are required for the daf-16/FOXO arrest-defective phenotype, suggesting that daf-16/FOXO represses dbl-1/TGF-β and daf-36. The dbl-1/TGF-β and daf-12/NHR pathways have not previously been shown to affect L1 development, but we found that disruption of these pathways delayed L1 development in fed larvae, consistent with these pathways promoting development in starved daf-16/FOXO mutants. Though the dbl-1/TGF-β and daf-12/NHR pathways are epistatic to daf-16/FOXO for the arrest-defective phenotype, disruption of these pathways does not suppress starvation sensitivity of daf-16/FOXO mutants. This observation uncouples starvation survival from developmental arrest, indicating that DAF-16/FOXO targets distinct effectors for each phenotype, and revealing that inappropriate development during starvation does not cause the early demise of daf-16/FOXO mutants. Overall, this study shows that daf-16/FOXO promotes developmental arrest cell-nonautonomously by repressing pathways that promote larval development.
 
Overall design Two biological replicates of arrested L1 daf-16(mgDf50) larvae. Compare to arrested N2 larvae from GEO accession GSE33023 (Accessions GSM818545, GSM818548, and GSM818552). We used the previously processed data in the analysis of the current study.
 
Contributor(s) Maxwell CS, Baugh LR
Citation(s) 26656736
Submission date May 28, 2015
Last update date May 15, 2019
Contact name Colin Scott Maxwell
E-mail(s) [email protected]
Organization name Duke University
Department Biology
Lab L. Ryan Baugh
Street address 4314 FFSC
City Durham
State/province NC
ZIP/Postal code 27708
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL14752 AB SOLiD 4 System (Caenorhabditis elegans)
Samples (2)
GSM1697877 Starved_L1_daf16_A
GSM1697878 Starved_L1_daf16_B
Relations
BioProject PRJNA285208
SRA SRP058813

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Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE69329_RAW.tar 280.0 Kb (http)(custom) TAR (of TXT)
SRA Run SelectorHelp
Raw data are available in SRA
Processed data provided as supplementary file

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