Abstract

BackgroundAnimals are exposed to a wide range of environmental stresses that can cause potentially fatal cellular damage. The ability to survive the period of stress as well as to repair any damage incurred is essential for fitness. Exposure to 2 °C for 24 h or longer is rapidly fatal to the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, but the process of recovery from a shorter, initially non-lethal, cold shock is poorly understood.ResultsWe report that cold shock of less than 12-hour duration does not initially kill C. elegans, but these worms experience a progression of devastating phenotypes over the next 96 h that correlate with their eventual fate: successful recovery from the cold shock and survival, or failure to recover and death. Cold-shocked worms experience a marked loss of pigmentation, decrease in the size of their intestine and gonads, and disruption to the vulva. Those worms who will successfully recover from the cold shock regain their pigmentation and much of the integrity of their intestine and gonads. Those who will die do so with a distinct phenotype from worms dying during or immediately following cold shock, suggesting independent mechanisms. Worms lacking the G-protein coupled receptor FSHR-1 are resistant to acute death from longer cold shocks, and are more successful in their recovery from shorter sub-lethal cold shocks.ConclusionsWe have defined two distinct phases of death associated with cold shock and described a progression of phenotypes that accompanies the course of recovery from that cold shock. The G-protein coupled receptor FSHR-1 antagonizes these novel processes of damage and recovery.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12860-015-0079-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Animals are exposed to a wide range of environmental stresses that can cause potentially fatal cellular damage

  • FSHR-1 plays a role in cold shock survival and recovery To begin dissecting the genetic mechanisms regulating the recovery from cold shock, we examined the involvement of several genes with known roles in other stress response pathways

  • Must worms survive the acute cold exposure itself, and they must successfully complete a distinct process of recovery that occurs over several days following the cold shock

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Summary

Introduction

Animals are exposed to a wide range of environmental stresses that can cause potentially fatal cellular damage. The ability to survive the period of stress as well as to repair any damage incurred is essential for fitness. All organisms are exposed to a wide variety of stresses during their lives. The ability of an individual to resist and respond to these stresses is crucial for its survival and fitness. In C. elegans, reproduction is one process affected by heat stress. Worms subjected to a 24-hour heat stress (28–31 °C) survive but exhibit damage to their germline and somatic gonad [1]. Over the 72 h, many worms recover reproductive fecundity, indicating that the ability to repair damage and recover from stress is an important

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