4.4 Article

Autophagy-related DjAtg1-1 plays critical role in planarian regeneration by regulating proliferation and cell death

Journal

CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH
Volume 388, Issue 2, Pages 273-286

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00441-022-03591-3

Keywords

Planarian; Dugesia japonica; Autophagy; Regeneration; DjAtg1s

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32070427, 31570376, 31471965, u1604173]
  2. Major Public Welfare Project of Henan Province [201300311700]
  3. Puyang Field Scientific Observation and Research Station for Yellow River Wetland Ecosystem, Henan Province

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study identifies three autophagy-related (Atg) genes from Dugesia japonica and examines their roles in planarian regeneration. The research shows that these genes are involved in autophagy and regeneration processes, and their knockdown leads to different effects on planarians, suggesting a link between autophagy, proliferation, and cell death during regeneration.
Autophagy is an intracellular degradation process and plays key roles in energy recycle and homeostasis maintenance during planarian regeneration. Although planarians provide an ideal model organism for studying autophagy in vivo, the molecular mechanism of planarian autophagy is still unknown. Here, we identify three autophagy-related (Atg) gene 1 homologs from Dugesia japonica and study their roles in planarian regeneration. Both DjATG1-1 and DjATG1-2 proteins show homology to vertebrate unc-51 like autophagy activating kinase 1 (ULK1) and ULK2, DjATG1-3 shows homology to vertebrate ULK3. In contrast to the ubiquitously expressed DjAtg1-1 and DjAtg1-3, DjAtg1-2 is mainly expressed in the intestine branches and epidermis. All the three DjAtg1s can respond to planarian regeneration and starvation. Both DjAtg1-1 and DjAtg1-2 are expressed in the reproductive organs of the starved sexual worms. DjAtg1-1 or DjAtg1-3 RNAi leads to head lysis and death of starved planarians, accompanied by exhaustion of neoblasts. DjAtg1-1 RNAi causes autophagy and regeneration defects and decreases proliferation and cell death; both DjAtg1-2 and DjAtg1-3 RNAi cause no autophagy or regeneration defect but increase cell death during regeneration. Our findings uncover the roles of DjAtg1s in autophagy and regeneration of planarian and highlight the links between proliferation, cell death, and autophagy during regeneration.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available