An explicit test of the phospholipid saturation hypothesis of acquired cold tolerance in Caenorhabditis elegans

  1. Patricia Murray,
  2. Scott A. L. Hayward,
  3. Gregor G. Govan,
  4. Andrew Y. Gracey*, and
  5. Andrew R. Cossins
  1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Crown Street, Liverpool L69 7ZB, United Kingdom
  1. Edited by Gregory A. Petsko, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, and approved January 19, 2007 (received for review November 2, 2006)

Abstract

Protection of poikilothermic animals from seasonal cold is widely regarded as being causally linked to changes in the unsaturation of membrane phospholipids, yet in animals this proposition remains formally untested. We have now achieved this by the genetic manipulation of lipid biosynthesis of Caenorhabditis elegans independent of temperature. Worms transferred from 25°C to 10°C develop over several days a much-increased tolerance of lethal cold (0°C) and also an increased phospholipid unsaturation, as in higher animal models. Of the three C. elegans Δ9-desaturases, transcript levels of fat-7 only were up-regulated by cold transfer. RNAi suppression of fat-7 caused the induction of fat-5 desaturase, so to control desaturase expression we combined RNAi of fat-7 with a fat-5 knockout. These fat-5/fat-7 manipulated worms displayed the expected negative linear relationship between lipid saturation and cold tolerance at 0°C, an outcome confirmed by dietary rescue. However, this change in lipid saturation explains just 16% of the observed difference between cold tolerance of animals held at 25°C and 10°C. Thus, although the manipulated lipid saturation affects the tolerable thermal window, and altered Δ9-desaturase expression accounts for cold-induced lipid adjustments, the effect is relatively small and none of the lipid manipulations were sufficient to convert worms between fully cold-sensitive and fully cold-tolerant states. Critically, transfer of 10°C-acclimated worms back to 25°C led to them restoring the usual cold-sensitive phenotype within 24 h despite retaining a lipid profile characteristic of 10°C worms. Other nonlipid mechanisms of acquired cold protection clearly dominate inducible cold tolerance.

Footnotes

  • To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: cossins{at}liv.ac.uk
  • Author contributions: P.M. and S.A.L.H. contributed equally to this work; P.M., S.A.L.H., A.Y.G., and A.R.C. designed research; P.M., S.A.L.H., and G.G.G. performed research; A.Y.G. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; P.M., S.A.L.H., and A.R.C. analyzed data; and P.M., S.A.L.H., and A.R.C. wrote the paper.

  • *Present address: Marine Environmental Biology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.

  • This article is a PNAS direct submission.

  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0609590104/DC1.

  • Abbreviations:
    PC,
    phosphatidylcholine;
    PE,
    phosphatidylethanolamine;
    PUFA,
    polyunsaturated fatty acid;
    MUFA,
    monounsaturated fatty acid;
    SFA,
    saturated fatty acid.
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