Somatic nuclear blebbing in Caenorhabditis elegans is not a feature of organismal aging but a potential indicator of germline proliferation in early adulthood

Author:

Fan Qiang123,Li Xue-Mei23,Zhai Chao23,Li Bin23,Li Shang-Tong23,Dong Meng-Qiu123

Affiliation:

1. Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College , Beijing 100730 , China

2. National Institute of Biological Sciences (NIBS) , Beijing 102206 , China

3. Tsinghua Institute of Multidisciplinary Biomedical Research, Tsinghua University , Beijing 102206 , China

Abstract

Abstract Abnormal nuclear morphology is suggested to be a hallmark of aging and one such abnormality is nuclear blebbing. However, little is known about whether and how nuclear blebbing participates in animal aging, and what regulates it. In this study, we show that the frequency of nuclear blebbing in the hypodermis increases during aging in wild-type C. elegans. These nuclear blebs are enveloped by the nuclear lamina, the inner and the outer nuclear membrane, and 42% of them contain chromatin. Although nuclear blebbing could lead to DNA loss if chromatin-containing blebs detach and fuse with lysosomes, we find by time-lapse imaging that nuclear blebs rarely detach, and the estimated lifetime of a nuclear bleb is 772 h or 32 days. The amount of DNA lost through nuclear blebbing is estimated to be about 0.1% of the total DNA loss by adult Day 11. Furthermore, the frequency of nuclear blebbing does not correlate with the rate of aging in C. elegans. Old age does not necessarily induce nuclear blebbing, neither does starvation, heat stress, or oxidative stress. Intriguingly, we find that proliferation of germ cells promotes nuclear blebbing.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Ministry of Science and Technology of China

Beijing Municipal Science and Technology Commission

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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