Author:
Lee Dongyeop,An Seon Woo A.,Jung Yoonji,Yamaoka Yasuyo,Ryu Youngjae,Goh Grace Ying Shyen,Beigi Arshia,Ma Dengke,Ha Chang Man,Taubert Stefan,Lee Youngsook,Lee Seung-Jae V.
Abstract
AbstractLow temperatures slow aging and extend lifespan in many organisms, including Caenorhabditis elegans. However, the metabolic and homeostatic aspects of low temperature-induced longevity remain poorly understood. Here, we show that changes in lipid composition regulated by MDT-15/Mediator 15, transcriptional co-regulator, is essential for low temperature-induced longevity and proteostasis in C. elegans. We find that inhibition of mdt-15 prevents animals from living long at low temperatures. We show that MDT-15 up-regulates fat-7, a fatty acid desaturase, at low temperatures, which increases the ratio of unsaturated to saturated fatty acids. We further demonstrate that maintaining this increased fatty acid ratio is essential for protein homeostasis and longevity at low temperatures. Thus, the homeostasis of lipid composition by MDT-15 appears to be a limiting factor for C. elegans proteostasis and longevity at low temperatures. Our findings highlight the crucial roles of fat regulation in maintaining normal organismal physiology under different environmental conditions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory