Author:
Bar-Ziv Raz,Dutta Naibedya,Hruby Adam,Sukarto Edward,Averbukh Maxim,Alcala Athena,Henderson Hope R.,Durieux Jenni,Tronnes Sarah U.,Ahmad Qazi,Bolas Theodore,Perez Joel,Dishart Julian G.,Vega Matthew,Garcia Gilberto,Higuchi-Sanabria Ryo,Dillin Andrew
Abstract
AbstractThe nervous system plays a critical role in maintaining whole-organism homeostasis; neurons experiencing mitochondrial stress can coordinate the induction of protective cellular pathways, such as the mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPRMT), between tissues. However, these studies largely ignored non-neuronal cells of the nervous system. Here, we found that UPRMTactivation in four, astrocyte-like glial cells in the nematode,C. elegans, can promote protein homeostasis by alleviating protein aggregation in neurons. Surprisingly, we find that glial cells utilize small clear vesicles (SCVs) to signal to neurons, which then relay the signal to the periphery using dense-core vesicles (DCVs). This work underlines the importance of glia in establishing and regulating protein homeostasis within the nervous system, which can then impact neuron-mediated effects in organismal homeostasis and longevity.One-Sentence SummaryGlial cells sense mitochondrial stress and signal a beneficial stress signal to promote neuronal health and longevity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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