RRC ID 35963
著者 Liu JL, Desjardins D, Branicky R, Agellon LB, Hekimi S.
タイトル Mitochondrial oxidative stress alters a pathway in Caenorhabditis elegans strongly resembling that of bile acid biosynthesis and secretion in vertebrates.
ジャーナル PLoS Genet
Abstract Mammalian bile acids (BAs) are oxidized metabolites of cholesterol whose amphiphilic properties serve in lipid and cholesterol uptake. BAs also act as hormone-like substances that regulate metabolism. The Caenorhabditis elegans clk-1 mutants sustain elevated mitochondrial oxidative stress and display a slow defecation phenotype that is sensitive to the level of dietary cholesterol. We found that: 1) The defecation phenotype of clk-1 mutants is suppressed by mutations in tat-2 identified in a previous unbiased screen for suppressors of clk-1. TAT-2 is homologous to ATP8B1, a flippase required for normal BA secretion in mammals. 2) The phenotype is suppressed by cholestyramine, a resin that binds BAs. 3) The phenotype is suppressed by the knock-down of C. elegans homologues of BA-biosynthetic enzymes. 4) The phenotype is enhanced by treatment with BAs. 5) Lipid extracts from C. elegans contain an activity that mimics the effect of BAs on clk-1, and the activity is more abundant in clk-1 extracts. 6) clk-1 and clk-1;tat-2 double mutants show altered cholesterol content. 7) The clk-1 phenotype is enhanced by high dietary cholesterol and this requires TAT-2. 8) Suppression of clk-1 by tat-2 is rescued by BAs, and this requires dietary cholesterol. 9) The clk-1 phenotype, including the level of activity in lipid extracts, is suppressed by antioxidants and enhanced by depletion of mitochondrial superoxide dismutases. These observations suggest that C. elegans synthesizes and secretes molecules with properties and functions resembling those of BAs. These molecules act in cholesterol uptake, and their level of synthesis is up-regulated by mitochondrial oxidative stress. Future investigations should reveal whether these molecules are in fact BAs, which would suggest the unexplored possibility that the elevated oxidative stress that characterizes the metabolic syndrome might participate in disease processes by affecting the regulation of metabolism by BAs.
巻・号 8(3)
ページ e1002553
公開日 2012-1-1
DOI 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002553
PII PGENETICS-D-11-02270
PMID 22438816
PMC PMC3305355
MeSH Adenosine Triphosphatases / genetics Adenosine Triphosphatases / metabolism Animals Bile Acids and Salts / biosynthesis* Bile Acids and Salts / metabolism Caenorhabditis elegans* / genetics Caenorhabditis elegans* / metabolism Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins / genetics* Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins / metabolism* Cholesterol* / biosynthesis Cholesterol* / metabolism Cholestyramine Resin / pharmacology Gene Knockdown Techniques Humans Lipids / pharmacology Lipoproteins / metabolism Mitochondria / genetics Mitochondria / metabolism Oxidative Stress* / genetics Sequence Homology, Amino Acid Superoxide Dismutase / antagonists & inhibitors
IF 5.175
引用数 9
WOS 分野 GENETICS & HEREDITY
リソース情報
線虫 tat-2(tm1634)