Cellular responses to chronic stress remain largely uncharacterized, yet many diseases and environmental stresses occur over extended periods of time. C. elegans exposed to a chronic heat stress of 28 deg C for 2 days stop laying eggs without displaying other major physiological defects. We used RNA-seq to characterize the molecular responses to this chronic stress condition and investigate mechanisms contributing to reproductive cessation. Chronic heat shock (HS) caused nearly 15% of the transcriptome to change at least 4-fold relative to controls, as compared to only 0.02% of transcripts with an acute, 1-hour HS, indicating unique cellular responses to chronic stress. Interestingly, less than 4% of all oogenesis-enriched genes were affected, yet chronic HS repressed all known vitellogenin genes. These genes encode yolk proteins that are expressed in the intestine, secreted into the pseudocoelom, and then endocytosed by oocytes in the gonad. Surprisingly, yolk protein levels did not reflect the decreased mRNA levels, and a
vit-2::GFP reporter revealed that the yolk accumulates in the pseudocoelom many hours before egg-laying rates decline. Therefore, this protein trafficking defect could be a mechanism contributing to the sensitivity of reproduction to chronic HS. Moreover, a fluid-phase endocytosis reporter that is expressed in muscle cells, secreted into the pseudocoelom, and taken up by coelomocytes revealed additional protein trafficking disruptions during chronic HS, suggesting that extended temperature stress inhibits endocytosis generally. Our working model for the mechanistic link between chronic HS and endocytosis is the reallocation of molecular chaperones, which are known to have vital roles in endocytosis and are also critical for combating stress-induced protein misfolding. Recently, a similar connection between protein misfolding and endocytosis defects through chaperone titration has been implicated in neurodegenerative disease models. Together, these discoveries reveal that disruption of endocytosis could be a feature shared across chronic stress conditions and diseases that affects reproduction and other phenotypes.