TY - JOUR
T1 - Context-specific regulation of lysosomal lipolysis through network-level diverting of transcription factor interactions
AU - Mony, Vinod K.
AU - Drangowska-Way, Anna
AU - Albert, Reka
AU - Harrison, Emma
AU - Ghaddar, Abbas
AU - Horak, Mary Kate
AU - Ke, Wenfan
AU - O’Rourke, Eyleen J.
N1 - Funding Information:
manuscript. We are grateful to A. N. Chaudhry, M. Hilzendeger, A. Huckaby, A. Loperfito, M. Marraccini, G. Perry, T. Tabackman, J. Taylor, D. Martin, and R. Way for help with experiments and/or data analysis. We especially thank Nella Solodukhina for preparing reagents. We thank A. Bergland, G. Bloom, S. Siegrist, B. Winckler, and the E.J.O. laboratory members for the helpful discussions. We acknowledge the C. elegans strains provided by the Caenorhabditis Genetics Center, which is funded by NIH Office of Research Infrastructure Programs (P40 OD010440), and microscopy support from the University of Virginia Imaging Keck Center (NIH RR025616). This work was supported by NIH Grant DK087928, Pew Biomedical Scholar Award, Jeffress Trust Award, and the generous support of the W. M. Keck Foundation to E.J.O. The Jefferson Scholars Foundation Fellowship supported A.D-W., and NSF Grants MCB 1715826 and IIS 1814405 supported R.A.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/10/12
Y1 - 2021/10/12
N2 - Plasticity in multicellular organisms involves signaling pathways converting contexts—either natural environmental challenges or laboratory perturbations—into context-specific changes in gene expression. Congruently, the interactions between the signaling molecules and transcription factors (TF) regulating these responses are also context specific. However, when a target gene responds across contexts, the upstream TF identified in one context is often inferred to regulate it across contexts. Reconciling these stable TF–target gene pair inferences with the context-specific nature of homeostatic responses is therefore needed. The induction of the Caenorhabditis elegans genes lipl-3 and lipl-4 is observed in many genetic contexts and is essential to survival during fasting. We find DAF-16/FOXO mediating lipl-4 induction in all contexts tested; hence, lipl-4 regulation seems context independent and compatible with across-context inferences. In contrast, DAF-16–mediated regulation of lipl-3 is context specific. DAF-16 reduces the induction of lipl-3 during fasting, yet it promotes it during oxidative stress. Through discrete dynamic modeling and genetic epistasis, we define that DAF-16 represses HLH-30/TFEB—the main TF activating lipl-3 during fasting. Contrastingly, DAF-16 activates the stress-responsive TF HSF-1 during oxidative stress, which promotes C. elegans survival through induction of lipl-3. Furthermore, the TF MXL-3 contributes to the dominance of HSF-1 at the expense of HLH-30 during oxidative stress but not during fasting. This study shows how context-specific diverting of functional interactions within a molecular network allows cells to specifically respond to a large number of contexts with a limited number of molecular players, a mode of transcriptional regulation we name “contextualized transcription.”.
AB - Plasticity in multicellular organisms involves signaling pathways converting contexts—either natural environmental challenges or laboratory perturbations—into context-specific changes in gene expression. Congruently, the interactions between the signaling molecules and transcription factors (TF) regulating these responses are also context specific. However, when a target gene responds across contexts, the upstream TF identified in one context is often inferred to regulate it across contexts. Reconciling these stable TF–target gene pair inferences with the context-specific nature of homeostatic responses is therefore needed. The induction of the Caenorhabditis elegans genes lipl-3 and lipl-4 is observed in many genetic contexts and is essential to survival during fasting. We find DAF-16/FOXO mediating lipl-4 induction in all contexts tested; hence, lipl-4 regulation seems context independent and compatible with across-context inferences. In contrast, DAF-16–mediated regulation of lipl-3 is context specific. DAF-16 reduces the induction of lipl-3 during fasting, yet it promotes it during oxidative stress. Through discrete dynamic modeling and genetic epistasis, we define that DAF-16 represses HLH-30/TFEB—the main TF activating lipl-3 during fasting. Contrastingly, DAF-16 activates the stress-responsive TF HSF-1 during oxidative stress, which promotes C. elegans survival through induction of lipl-3. Furthermore, the TF MXL-3 contributes to the dominance of HSF-1 at the expense of HLH-30 during oxidative stress but not during fasting. This study shows how context-specific diverting of functional interactions within a molecular network allows cells to specifically respond to a large number of contexts with a limited number of molecular players, a mode of transcriptional regulation we name “contextualized transcription.”.
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U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2104832118
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2104832118
M3 - Article
C2 - 34607947
AN - SCOPUS:85116580714
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 118
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 41
M1 - e2104832118
ER -