Cell Reports (Aug 2015)

Heterotypic Signals from Neural HSF-1 Separate Thermotolerance from Longevity

  • Peter M. Douglas,
  • Nathan A. Baird,
  • Milos S. Simic,
  • Sarah Uhlein,
  • Mark A. McCormick,
  • Suzanne C. Wolff,
  • Brian K. Kennedy,
  • Andrew Dillin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.07.026
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
pp. 1196 – 1204

Abstract

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Integrating stress responses across tissues is essential for the survival of multicellular organisms. The metazoan nervous system can sense protein-misfolding stress arising in different subcellular compartments and initiate cytoprotective transcriptional responses in the periphery. Several subcellular compartments possess a homotypic signal whereby the respective compartment relies on a single signaling mechanism to convey information within the affected cell to the same stress-responsive pathway in peripheral tissues. In contrast, we find that the heat shock transcription factor, HSF-1, specifies its mode of transcellular protection via two distinct signaling pathways. Upon thermal stress, neural HSF-1 primes peripheral tissues through the thermosensory neural circuit to mount a heat shock response. Independent of this thermosensory circuit, neural HSF-1 activates the FOXO transcription factor, DAF-16, in the periphery and prolongs lifespan. Thus a single transcription factor can coordinate different stress response pathways to specify its mode of protection against changing environmental conditions.