Heme utilization in the Caenorhabditis elegans hypodermal cells is facilitated by heme-responsive gene-2 |
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Authors: | Chen Caiyong Samuel Tamika K Krause Michael Dailey Harry A Hamza Iqbal |
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Affiliation: | Department of Animal & Avian Sciences, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA. |
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Abstract: | The roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans is a heme auxotroph that requires the coordinated actions of HRG-1 heme permeases to transport environmental heme into the intestine and HRG-3, a secreted protein, to deliver intestinal heme to other tissues including the embryo. Here we show that heme homeostasis in the extraintestinal hypodermal tissue was facilitated by the transmembrane protein HRG-2. Systemic heme deficiency up-regulated hrg-2 mRNA expression over 200-fold in the main body hypodermal syncytium, hyp 7. HRG-2 is a type I membrane protein that binds heme and localizes to the endoplasmic reticulum and apical plasma membrane. Cytochrome heme profiles are aberrant in HRG-2-deficient worms, a phenotype that was partially suppressed by heme supplementation. A heme-deficient yeast strain, ectopically expressing worm HRG-2, revealed significantly improved growth at submicromolar concentrations of exogenous heme. Taken together, our results implicate HRG-2 as a facilitator of heme utilization in the Caenorhabditis elegans hypodermis and provide a mechanism for the regulation of heme homeostasis in an extraintestinal tissue. |
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Keywords: | C. elegans Gene Regulation Heme Iron Metabolism Metals Helminth Tetrapyrrole |
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