Maternal Diet and Insulin-Like Signaling Control Intergenerational Plasticity of Progeny Size and Starvation Resistance.
Abstract
Maternal effects of environmental conditions produce intergenerational phenotypic
plasticity. Adaptive value of these effects depends on appropriate anticipation of
environmental conditions in the next generation, and mismatch between conditions may
contribute to disease. However, regulation of intergenerational plasticity is poorly
understood. Dietary restriction (DR) delays aging but maternal effects have not been
investigated. We demonstrate maternal effects of DR in the roundworm C. elegans. Worms
cultured in DR produce fewer but larger progeny. Nutrient availability is assessed
in late larvae and young adults, rather than affecting a set point in young larvae,
and maternal age independently affects progeny size. Reduced signaling through the
insulin-like receptor daf-2/InsR in the maternal soma causes constitutively large
progeny, and its effector daf-16/FoxO is required for this effect. nhr-49/Hnf4, pha-4/FoxA,
and skn-1/Nrf also regulate progeny-size plasticity. Genetic analysis suggests that
insulin-like signaling controls progeny size in part through regulation of nhr-49/Hnf4,
and that pha-4/FoxA and skn-1/Nrf function in parallel to insulin-like signaling and
nhr-49/Hnf4. Furthermore, progeny of DR worms are buffered from adverse consequences
of early-larval starvation, growing faster and producing more offspring than progeny
of worms fed ad libitum. These results suggest a fitness advantage when mothers and
their progeny experience nutrient stress, compared to an environmental mismatch where
only progeny are stressed. This work reveals maternal provisioning as an organismal
response to DR, demonstrates potentially adaptive intergenerational phenotypic plasticity,
and identifies conserved pathways mediating these effects.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13270Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1371/journal.pgen.1006396Publication Info
Hibshman, Jonathan D; Hung, Anthony; & Baugh, L Ryan (2016). Maternal Diet and Insulin-Like Signaling Control Intergenerational Plasticity of Progeny
Size and Starvation Resistance. PLoS Genet, 12(10). pp. e1006396. 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006396. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13270.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
L. Ryan Baugh
Professor of Biology
The Baugh Lab is interested in phenotypic plasticity and physiological adaptation
to variable environmental conditions. We are using the roundworm C. elegans to understand
how animals adapt to starvation using primarily genetic and genomic approaches. We
are studying how development is governed by nutrient availability, how animals survive
starvation, and the long-term consequences of starvation including adult disease and
transgenerational epigenetic inheritance.

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