| Literature DB >> 34307379 |
Theadora Tolkin1, E Jane Albert Hubbard1.
Abstract
Like many animals and humans, reproduction in the nematode C. elegans declines with age. This decline is the cumulative result of age-related changes in several steps of germline function, many of which are highly accessible for experimental investigation in this short-lived model organism. Here we review recent work showing that a very early and major contributing step to reproductive decline is the depletion of the germline stem and progenitor cell pool. Since many cellular and molecular aspects of stem cell biology and aging are conserved across animals, understanding mechanisms of age-related decline of germline stem and progenitor cells in C. elegans has broad implications for aging stem cells, germline stem cells, and reproductive aging.Entities:
Keywords: Notch pathway; germline flux; insulin/IGF-like signal transduction pathway; reproductive aging; stem cell aging
Year: 2021 PMID: 34307379 PMCID: PMC8297657 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.699671
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Schematic representation of the aging C. elegans adult hermaphrodite reproductive system. (A) Early adult gonad anatomy. The germline progenitor zone is located at the distal end of the gonad. As progenitors proliferate, they are displaced and move proximally (“germline flux”), progressing through oogenic prophase of meiosis I until they become arrested in diakinesis at the proximal end of the oviduct, awaiting maturation-inducing signals from sperm in the spermatheca. (B) Simplified schematic of a days 3–4 adult gonad, depicting distal stem/progenitor pool and proximal arrested oocytes, sperm in the spermatheca and embryos in the uterus. (C) Schematics representing aged (days 5–6) sperm-depleted and sperm-replete conditions. (D) Schematic representing a post-reproductive day 12 gonad. Regardless of sperm availability, reproduction has ceased, and the progenitor zone is severely reduced. Diagrams in (A–D) represent wild-type worms. Additional notes: The progenitor zone of aged hermaphrodites contains fewer cells than at adult day 1 peak; in mated hermaphrodites (as yet untested in the other conditions) SYGL-1- and LST-1- positive pools also decline. Sperm-depleted hermaphrodites accumulate unfertilized oocytes in the oviduct, whereas sperm-replete hermaphrodites do not. The PZ mitotic cell cycle also slows, as does the rate of meiotic entry and the rate of progression through prophase of meiosis I. These age-related changes in bulk germline flux contribute to the reduction in progeny production with age. The numbers of oocytes are schematized here to emphasize flux vs. stacking; Kocsisova et al. (2019) report an average of ∼14 oocytes are in diplotene and diakinesis at days 1 and 3 and an average of ∼9 at day 5 in mated hermaphrodites. See text for details and additional references.