The C. elegans TGF-beta Dauer pathway regulates longevity via insulin signaling. Author Wendy Shaw, Shijing Luo, Jessica Landis, Jasmine Ashraf, Coleen Murphy Publication Year 2007 Type Journal Article Abstract BACKGROUND: Previous genetic evidence suggested that the C. elegans TGF-beta Dauer pathway is responsible solely for the regulation of dauer formation, with no role in longevity regulation, whereas the insulin/IGF-1 signaling (IIS) pathway regulates both dauer formation and longevity.RESULTS: We have uncovered a significant longevity-regulating activity by the TGF-beta Dauer pathway that is masked by an egg-laying (Egl) phenotype; mutants in the pathway display up to 2-fold increases in life span. The expression profiles of adult TGF-beta mutants overlap significantly with IIS pathway profiles: Adult TGF-beta mutants regulate the transcription of many DAF-16-regulated genes, including genes that regulate life span, the two pathways share enriched Gene Ontology categories, and a motif previously associated with DAF-16-regulated transcription (the DAE, or DAF-16-associated element) is overrepresented in the promoters of TGF-beta regulated genes. The TGF-beta Dauer pathway's regulation of longevity appears to be mediated at least in part through insulin interactions with the IIS pathway and the regulation of DAF-16 localization.CONCLUSIONS: Together, our results suggest there are TGF-beta-specific downstream targets and functions, but that the TGF-beta and IIS pathways might be more tightly linked in the regulation of longevity than has been previously appreciated. Keywords Animals, Signal Transduction, Caenorhabditis elegans, Insulin, Longevity, Transforming Growth Factor beta, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I Journal Curr Biol Volume 17 Issue 19 Pages 1635-45 Date Published 10/2007 Alternate Journal Curr. Biol. Google ScholarBibTeXEndNote X3 XML