Abstract

When C. elegans hermaphrodites are deprived of food during the mid-L4 larval stage and throughout adulthood, they enter an alternative stage termed “adult reproductive diapause (ARD)” in which they halt reproduction and extend their lifespan. During ARD, germ cell proliferation stops; oogenesis is slowed; and the gonad shrinks progressively, which has been described as the “oogenic germline starvation response”. Upon refeeding, the shrunken gonad is regenerated, and animals recover fertility and live out their remaining lifespan. Little is known about the effects of ARD on oocyte quality after ARD. Thus, the aim of this study was to determine how oocyte quality is affected after ARD by measuring brood size and embryonic lethality as a reflection of defective oocyte production. We found that ARD affects reproductive capacity. The oogenic germline starvation response protects oogenic germ cells by slowing oogenesis to prevent prolonged arrest in diakinesis. In contrast to a previous report, we found that germ cell apoptosis is not the cause of gonad shrinkage; instead, we propose that ovulation contributes to gonad shrinkage during the oogenic germline starvation response. We show that germ cell apoptosis increases and continues during ARD via lin-35/Rb and an unknown mechanism. Although apoptosis contributes to maintain germ cell quality during ARD, we demonstrated that apoptosis is not essential to preserve animal fertility. Finally, we show that IIS signaling inactivation partially participates in the oogenic germline starvation response.

Highlights

  • To ensure species continuity, animals have developed mechanisms for protecting germ cells during stressful conditions

  • It has been reported that wild-type animals survive up to 30 days in adult reproductive diapause (ARD), their self-fertility is severely impaired after 15 days of starvation [7]

  • Our results indicate that the proportion of germ cells eliminated by cell death was similar in the two genetic backgrounds (Fig 8E) suggesting that the increased germ cell apoptosis observed during ARD is not a consequence of DNA damage or defects during meiosis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Animals have developed mechanisms for protecting germ cells during stressful conditions. The C. elegans hermaphrodite germline serves as an excellent model for studying cell biology. In C. elegans hermaphrodites, 2 identical U-shaped gonad arms contain germ cells (Fig 1A). Apoptosis partially protects germ cells from starvation during ARD. Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM) and received a fellowship from CONACyT (361899). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call