Author:
Misare Kelly R.,Ampolini Elizabeth A.,Gonzalez Hyland C.,Sullivan Kaitlan A.,Li Xin,Miller Camille,Sosseh Bintou,Dunne Jaclyn B.,Voelkel-Johnson Christina,Gordon Kacy L.,Hartman Jessica H.
Abstract
ABSTRACTPolyploid cells contain more than two copies of each chromosome. Polyploidy has important roles in development, evolution, and tissue regeneration/repair, and can arise as a programmed polyploidization event or be triggered by stress. Cancer cells are often polyploid.C. elegansnematodes are typically diploid, but stressors such as heat shock and starvation can trigger the production of tetraploid offspring. In this study, we utilized a recently published protocol to generate stable tetraploid strains ofC. elegansand compared their physiological traits and sensitivity to two DNA-damaging chemotherapeutic drugs, cisplatin and doxorubicin. As prior studies have shown, tetraploid worms are approximately 30% longer, shorter-lived, and have a smaller brood size than diploids. We investigated the reproductive defect further, determining that tetraploid worms have a shorter overall germline length, a higher rate of germ cell apoptosis, more aneuploidy in oocytes and offspring, and larger oocytes and embryos. We also found that tetraploid worms are modestly protected from growth delay from the chemotherapeutics but are similarly or more sensitive to reproductive toxicity. Transcriptomic analysis revealed differentially expressed pathways that may contribute to sensitivity to stress. Overall, this study reveals the phenotypic consequences of whole-animal tetraploidy inC. elegans.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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