AI Article Synopsis

  • Environmental stress during early development influences adult traits by altering gene expression patterns.
  • In C. elegans, larvae facing stress enter a resistant dauer stage, and when conditions improve, they resume development as postdauer adults.
  • The study reveals that the osm-9 TRPV channel gene is down-regulated in certain sensory neurons of postdauer adults, affecting their olfactory behavior, and identifies key proteins and mechanisms involved in this gene's transcriptional silencing.

Article Abstract

Environmental stress during early development can impact adult phenotypes via programmed changes in gene expression. C. elegans larvae respond to environmental stress by entering the stress-resistant dauer diapause pathway and resume development once conditions improve (postdauers). Here we show that the osm-9 TRPV channel gene is a target of developmental programming and is down-regulated specifically in the ADL chemosensory neurons of postdauer adults, resulting in a corresponding altered olfactory behavior that is mediated by ADL in an OSM-9-dependent manner. We identify a cis-acting motif bound by the DAF-3 SMAD and ZFP-1 (AF10) proteins that is necessary for the differential regulation of osm-9, and demonstrate that both chromatin remodeling and endo-siRNA pathways are major contributors to the transcriptional silencing of the osm-9 locus. This work describes an elegant mechanism by which developmental experience influences adult phenotypes by establishing and maintaining transcriptional changes via RNAi and chromatin remodeling pathways.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4924998PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.11642DOI Listing

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