SummaryEndogenous and exogenous stresses elicit transcriptional responses that limit damage and promote cell/organismal survival. Like its mammalian counterparts, hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 (HNF4) and peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor α (PPARα), Caenorhabditis elegans NHR‐49 is a well‐established regulator of lipid metabolism. Here, we reveal that NHR‐49 is essential to activate a transcriptional response common to organic peroxide and fasting, which includes the pro‐longevity gene fmo‐2/flavin‐containing monooxygenase. These NHR‐49‐dependent, stress‐responsive genes are also upregulated in long‐lived glp‐1/notch receptor mutants, with two of them making critical contributions to the oxidative stress resistance of wild‐type and long‐lived glp‐1 mutants worms. Similar to its role in lipid metabolism, NHR‐49 requires the mediator subunit mdt‐15 to promote stress‐induced gene expression. However, NHR‐49 acts independently from the transcription factor hlh‐30/TFEB that also promotes fmo‐2 expression. We show that activation of the p38 MAPK, PMK‐1, which is important for adaptation to a variety of stresses, is also important for peroxide‐induced expression of a subset of NHR‐49‐dependent genes that includes fmo‐2. However, organic peroxide increases NHR‐49 protein levels, by a posttranscriptional mechanism that does not require PMK‐1 activation. Together, these findings establish a new role for the HNF4/PPARα‐related NHR‐49 as a stress‐activated regulator of cytoprotective gene expression.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play important signaling roles in metazoans, but also cause significant molecular damage. Animals tightly control ROS levels using sophisticated defense mechanisms, yet the transcriptional pathways that induce ROS defense remain incompletely understood. In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, the transcription factor SKN-1 is considered a master regulator for detoxification and oxidative stress responses. Here, we show that MDT-15, a subunit of the conserved Mediator complex, is also required for oxidative stress responses in nematodes. Specifically, mdt-15 is required to express SKN-1 targets upon chemical and genetic increase in SKN-1 activity. mdt-15 is also required to express genes in SKN-1-dependent and SKN-1-independent fashions downstream of insulin/IGF-1 signaling and for the longevity of daf-2/insulin receptor mutants. At the molecular level, MDT-15 binds SKN-1 through a region distinct from the classical transcription-factor-binding KIX-domain. Moreover, mdt-15 is essential for the transcriptional response to and survival on the organic peroxide tert-butyl-hydroperoxide (tBOOH), a largely SKN-1-independent response. The MDT-15 interacting nuclear hormone receptor, NHR-64, is specifically required for tBOOH but not arsenite resistance, but NHR-64 is dispensable for the transcriptional response to tBOOH. Hence, NHR-64 and MDT-15’s mode of action remain elusive. Lastly, the role of MDT-15 in oxidative stress defense is functionally separable from its function in fatty acid metabolism, as exogenous polyunsaturated fatty acid complementation rescues developmental, but not stress sensitivity phenotypes of mdt-15 worms. Our findings reveal novel conserved players in the oxidative stress response and suggest a broad cytoprotective role for MDT-15.
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