Temperature affects all cellular processes. Exposure to elevated temperatures can lead to protein denaturation within cells, thus disrupting protein homeostasis. Cells respond by synthesizing highly conserved proteins : the heat shock proteins (HSP), which are essential for protecting them from cellular damages. This gene induction called the heat shock response (HSR) is thought to be cell-autonomous as unicellular organisms and metazoan individual cells can induce the HSR under direct heat stress. At the organismal level, temperature affects physiology and behavior. In the nematode C. elegans, temperature modulates, among others, growth and diapause entry. Thermotaxis, a temperature-dependant behavior is regulated by the AFD neuron that senses temperature. It was demonstrated that, in C. elegans, the heat shock response is also regulated by the AFD neuron and is not cell-autonomous. In addition to the AFD-dependant signal, the HSR appears to be regulated at the organismal level by the metabolic state of the animal. These data suggest a model whereby these two inputs inhibit hsp cell-autonomous expression and negatively regulate each other. To understand the molecular mechanisms by which the HSR is regulated at the organismal level, we used a RNA interference-based strategy, to screen for genes affecting the HSR in a C. elegans strain hypersensitive to RNAi. Specifically, we looked for reduction of fluorescence upon heat shock in a strain expressing the promoter of
hsp-70 fused to GFP. We tested RNAi on 57 candidates genes. We selected ligands expressed in the AFD neuron or in neurons communicating with the AFD, in addition to components from 5 signaling pathways known to be involved in growth, stress or dauer diapause. We identified 28 candidate genes, which may play a role in the regulation of the HSR. This suggests that several small molecules from several signaling pathway may be involved in the regulation of the HSR at the organismal level. Several RNAi hits are of particular interest.
dbl-1, encoding a TGF-beta ligand is expressed in the AFD neuron and several of its components seem to be involved.
daf-12, encodes a nuclear hormone receptor that integrates two candidate signaling pathways. Neupropeptides like peptides (nlp genes) also represent interesting candidates to investigate as their function within the organism is still not well understood. To confirm these RNAi hits, quantitative Real Time PCR on loss of function mutants and rescue experiment will be performed. Our aim is to understand the molecular mechanism by which multiple signaling pathways modulate the activity of HSF-1, the main transcription factor inducing hsp expression.