| Literature DB >> 32211406 |
E Carranza-García1, Rosa E Navarro1.
Abstract
Animals alter their reproductive cycles in response to changing nutritional conditions, to ensure that offspring production only occurs under favorable circumstances. These adaptive strategies include reversible hypometabolic states of dormancy such as "arrest" and "diapause." The free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans can arrest its life cycle during some larval stages without modifying its anatomy and physiology until conditions improve but it can also modify its morphological and physiological features to cope with harsh conditions and transition into diapause. The well-defined "dauer" diapause was described more than 40 years ago and has been the subject of comprehensive investigations. The existence of another hypometabolic state, termed adult reproductive diapause (ARD), has been debated after it was first described 10 years ago. Here, we review the current knowledge regarding the effect of food deprivation during the pre-reproductive larval and adult stages on overall organismal homeostasis, highlighting the implications on germ cell maintenance and fertility preservation.Entities:
Keywords: Caenorhabditis elegans; adult reproductive diapause; apoptosis; germ cells; germline; oogenic germline starvation response; starvation; stress
Year: 2020 PMID: 32211406 PMCID: PMC7057233 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Caenorhabditis elegans life cycle and diapauses. (A) The life cycle comprises the embryonic stage, 4 larval stages (L1–L4) and the adult stage, which is completed in 3 days. The length of each stage under control conditions is shown in hours (h) (green arrows point toward the transition between larval stages in normal conditions). Life cycle can be reversibly altered at specific checkpoints under harsh conditions to develop into alternate stages termed diapause. Red arrows show the transition from larval stage to diapause, cues triggering the entry into dauer and ARD diapauses and the features of each hypometabolic stage are specified. Blue arrows point to the transition of diapause to recovered conditions. (B) Nomarski image of the gonad of a 3-day-old well-fed hermaphrodite. (C) Nomarski image of the gonad of an ARD hermaphrodite (starved for 5 days starting from mid L4 stage). Note that these animals produce a single oocyte at a time, which is separated from the rest of the gonad by a constriction. (D) Nomarski image of the gonad of a hermaphrodite that was starved for 5 days and recovered in food for 3 days. Its gonad has regenerated and is comparable to the gonad of a young hermaphrodite that never faced starvation. (E) Nomarski image of the gonad of a 5-day-old, well-fed daf-2(e1370) hermaphrodite changed to the restrictive temperature (25°C) at mid L4 larval stage. Well-fed daf-2(e1370) hermaphrodites grown at 25°C have shrunk gonads that resemble the gonad of an ARD animal; however, their gonads do not form a single oocyte at a time or gonad constrictions. In all images one gonad arm is outlined in white; the distal gonad is marked with an asterisk (*); and the arrow points to the proximal gonad. Scale bar = 20 μm.
Genes that have been tested for ARD regulation.
| Gene | Soma | Germline | Developmental stage | Starvation length | References |
| ND | NR | Mid L4 | 5 and 15 days | ||
| NR | ND | Early mid L4 | 3 weeks | ||
| NR | R | Early mid L4 | 3 weeks | ||
| NR | NR | Early mid L4 | 3 weeks | ||
| NR | ND | Early mid L4 | 3 weeks | ||
| NR | NR* | Mid L4 | 5 days | ||
| NR | NR | Mid L4 | 5 days | ||
| ND | ND* | – | – | ||
| R | R | Early mid L4 | 15 days | ||
| ND | NR | Mid L4 | 5 days | ||
| ND | NR | Mid L4 | 5 days | ||
| ND | NR | Mid L4 | 5 days | ||
| ND | NR | Mid L4 | 5 days | ||
| ND | NR | Mid L4 | 5 days | ||
| ND | NR | Mid L4 | 5 days | ||
| ND | NR | Mid L4 | 5 days | ||
| ND | NR | Mid L4 | 5 days |