Protection of C. elegans from Anoxia by HYL-2 Ceramide Synthase

V Menuz, KS Howell, S Gentina, S Epstein, I Riezman… - Science, 2009 - science.org
V Menuz, KS Howell, S Gentina, S Epstein, I Riezman, M Fornallaz-Mulhauser…
Science, 2009science.org
Oxygen deprivation is rapidly deleterious for most organisms. However, Caenorhabditis
elegans has developed the ability to survive anoxia for at least 48 hours. Mutations in the
DAF-2/DAF-16 insulin-like signaling pathway promote such survival. We describe a pathway
involving the HYL-2 ceramide synthase that acts independently of DAF-2. Loss of the
ceramide synthase gene hyl-2 results in increased sensitivity of C. elegans to anoxia. C.
elegans has two ceramide synthases, hyl-1 and hyl-2, that participate in ceramide …
Oxygen deprivation is rapidly deleterious for most organisms. However, Caenorhabditis elegans has developed the ability to survive anoxia for at least 48 hours. Mutations in the DAF-2/DAF-16 insulin-like signaling pathway promote such survival. We describe a pathway involving the HYL-2 ceramide synthase that acts independently of DAF-2. Loss of the ceramide synthase gene hyl-2 results in increased sensitivity of C. elegans to anoxia. C. elegans has two ceramide synthases, hyl-1 and hyl-2, that participate in ceramide biogenesis and affect its ability to survive anoxic conditions. In contrast to hyl-2(lf) mutants, hyl-1(lf) mutants are more resistant to anoxia than normal animals. HYL-1 and HYL-2 have complementary specificities for fatty acyl chains. These data indicate that specific ceramides produced by HYL-2 confer resistance to anoxia.
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