Germ cell apoptosis is critical to maintain Caenorhabditis elegans offspring viability in stressful environments.

Maintaining reproduction in highly variable, often stressful, environments is an essential challenge for all organisms. Even transient exposure to mild environmental stress may directly damage germ cells or simply tax the physiology of an individual, making it difficult to produce quality gametes. I...

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Published in:PLoS ONE
Main Authors: Sarah Fausett, Nausicaa Poullet, Clotilde Gimond, Anne Vielle, Michele Bellone, Christian Braendle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0260573&type=printable
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author Sarah Fausett
Nausicaa Poullet
Clotilde Gimond
Anne Vielle
Michele Bellone
Christian Braendle
author_facet Sarah Fausett
Nausicaa Poullet
Clotilde Gimond
Anne Vielle
Michele Bellone
Christian Braendle
author_sort Sarah Fausett
collection DOAJ
container_title PLoS ONE
description Maintaining reproduction in highly variable, often stressful, environments is an essential challenge for all organisms. Even transient exposure to mild environmental stress may directly damage germ cells or simply tax the physiology of an individual, making it difficult to produce quality gametes. In Caenorhabditis elegans, a large fraction of germ cells acts as nurse cells, supporting developing oocytes before eventually undergoing so-called physiological germ cell apoptosis. Although C. elegans apoptosis has been extensively studied, little is known about how germline apoptosis is influenced by ecologically relevant environmental stress. Moreover, it remains unclear to what extent germline apoptosis contributes to maintaining oocyte quality, and thus offspring viability, in such conditions. Here we show that exposure to diverse environmental stressors, likely occurring in the natural C. elegans habitat (starvation, ethanol, acid, and mild oxidative stress), increases germline apoptosis, consistent with previous reports on stress-induced apoptosis. Using loss-of-function mutant alleles of ced-3 and ced-4, we demonstrate that eliminating the core apoptotic machinery strongly reduces embryonic survival when mothers are exposed to such environmental stressors during early adult life. In contrast, mutations in ced-9 and egl-1 that primarily block apoptosis in the soma but not in the germline, did not exhibit such reduced embryonic survival under environmental stress. Therefore, C. elegans germ cell apoptosis plays an essential role in maintaining offspring fitness in adverse environments. Finally, we show that ced-3 and ced-4 mutants exhibit concomitant decreases in embryo size and changes in embryo shape when mothers are exposed to environmental stress. These observations may indicate inadequate oocyte provisioning due to the absence of germ cell apoptosis. Taken together, our results show that the central genes of the apoptosis pathway play a key role in maintaining gamete quality, and thus offspring fitness, under ecologically relevant environmental conditions.
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spelling doaj-art-e10c244b02bb43b8a1c49f60ffb46d992025-08-20T03:15:47ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-011612e026057310.1371/journal.pone.0260573Germ cell apoptosis is critical to maintain Caenorhabditis elegans offspring viability in stressful environments.Sarah FausettNausicaa PoulletClotilde GimondAnne VielleMichele BelloneChristian BraendleMaintaining reproduction in highly variable, often stressful, environments is an essential challenge for all organisms. Even transient exposure to mild environmental stress may directly damage germ cells or simply tax the physiology of an individual, making it difficult to produce quality gametes. In Caenorhabditis elegans, a large fraction of germ cells acts as nurse cells, supporting developing oocytes before eventually undergoing so-called physiological germ cell apoptosis. Although C. elegans apoptosis has been extensively studied, little is known about how germline apoptosis is influenced by ecologically relevant environmental stress. Moreover, it remains unclear to what extent germline apoptosis contributes to maintaining oocyte quality, and thus offspring viability, in such conditions. Here we show that exposure to diverse environmental stressors, likely occurring in the natural C. elegans habitat (starvation, ethanol, acid, and mild oxidative stress), increases germline apoptosis, consistent with previous reports on stress-induced apoptosis. Using loss-of-function mutant alleles of ced-3 and ced-4, we demonstrate that eliminating the core apoptotic machinery strongly reduces embryonic survival when mothers are exposed to such environmental stressors during early adult life. In contrast, mutations in ced-9 and egl-1 that primarily block apoptosis in the soma but not in the germline, did not exhibit such reduced embryonic survival under environmental stress. Therefore, C. elegans germ cell apoptosis plays an essential role in maintaining offspring fitness in adverse environments. Finally, we show that ced-3 and ced-4 mutants exhibit concomitant decreases in embryo size and changes in embryo shape when mothers are exposed to environmental stress. These observations may indicate inadequate oocyte provisioning due to the absence of germ cell apoptosis. Taken together, our results show that the central genes of the apoptosis pathway play a key role in maintaining gamete quality, and thus offspring fitness, under ecologically relevant environmental conditions.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0260573&type=printable
spellingShingle Sarah Fausett
Nausicaa Poullet
Clotilde Gimond
Anne Vielle
Michele Bellone
Christian Braendle
Germ cell apoptosis is critical to maintain Caenorhabditis elegans offspring viability in stressful environments.
title Germ cell apoptosis is critical to maintain Caenorhabditis elegans offspring viability in stressful environments.
title_full Germ cell apoptosis is critical to maintain Caenorhabditis elegans offspring viability in stressful environments.
title_fullStr Germ cell apoptosis is critical to maintain Caenorhabditis elegans offspring viability in stressful environments.
title_full_unstemmed Germ cell apoptosis is critical to maintain Caenorhabditis elegans offspring viability in stressful environments.
title_short Germ cell apoptosis is critical to maintain Caenorhabditis elegans offspring viability in stressful environments.
title_sort germ cell apoptosis is critical to maintain caenorhabditis elegans offspring viability in stressful environments
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0260573&type=printable
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