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Hypoxia induces transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of small RNAs

Simon Yuan Wang, Kathleen Kim, Zach Klapholz O’Brown, Aileen Levan, Anne E. Dodson, Scott Kennedy, Chaim Chernoff, Eric Lieberman Greer

2022Cell Reports23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Animals sense and adapt to decreased oxygen availability, but whether and how hypoxia exposure in ancestors can elicit phenotypic consequences in normoxia-reared descendants are unclear. We show that hypoxia educes an intergenerational reduction in lipids and a transgenerational reduction in fertility in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. The transmission of these epigenetic phenotypes is dependent on repressive histone-modifying enzymes and the argonaute HRDE-1. Feeding naive C. elegans small RNAs extracted from hypoxia-treated worms is sufficient to induce a fertility defect. Furthermore, the endogenous small interfering RNA F44E5.4/5 is upregulated intergenerationally in response to hypoxia, and soaking naive normoxia-reared C. elegans with F44E5.4/5 double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) is sufficient to induce an intergenerational fertility defect. Finally, we demonstrate that labeled F44E5.4/5 dsRNA is itself transmitted from parents to children. Our results suggest that small RNAs respond to the environment and are sufficient to transmit non-genetic information from parents to their naive children.

Topics & Concepts

EpigeneticsTransgenerational epigeneticsHypoxia (environmental)microRNABiologyInheritance (genetic algorithm)DNA methylationGeneticsCell biologyComputational biologyGeneChemistryGene expressionOxygenOrganic chemistryRNA modifications and cancerEpigenetics and DNA MethylationMicroRNA in disease regulation
Hypoxia induces transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of small RNAs | Litcius