Background: Cellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, widely understood to be triggered by the damage itself, have recently been shown to be under cell nonautonomous control in the metazoan C. elegans. The heat shock response (HSR) is one such conserved mechanism, activated by cells upon exposure to proteotoxic conditions such as heat. Previously, we had shown that this conserved cytoprotective response is regulated by the thermosensory neuronal circuitry of C. elegans. Here, we investigate the mechanisms and physiological relevance of neuronal control. Results: By combining optogenetic methods with live visualization of the dynamics of the heat shock transcription factor (HSF1), we show that excitat...
Eukaryotic cells respond to heat stress by activating the transcription factor HSF1. In addition to ...
<div><p>The heat shock response (HSR) is essential to survive acute proteotoxic stress and has been ...
This work addresses two major unsolved questions in the field of C. elegans neuroscience and stress ...
Background: Cellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, widel...
Background: Cellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, widel...
Background: Cellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, widel...
SummaryBackgroundCellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, ...
SummaryBackgroundCellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, ...
Response to hyperthermia, highly conserved from bacteria to humans, involves transcriptional upregul...
To survive elevated temperatures, ectotherms adjust the fluidity of membranes by fine-tuning lipid d...
To survive elevated temperatures, ectotherms adjust the fluidity of membranes by fine-tuning lipid d...
To survive elevated temperatures, ectotherms adjust the fluidity of membranes by fine-tuning lipid d...
To survive elevated temperatures, ectotherms adjust the fluidity of membranes by fine-tuning lipid d...
Eukaryotic cells respond to heat stress by activating the transcription factor HSF1. In addition to ...
Eukaryotic cells respond to heat stress by activating the transcription factor HSF1. In addition to ...
Eukaryotic cells respond to heat stress by activating the transcription factor HSF1. In addition to ...
<div><p>The heat shock response (HSR) is essential to survive acute proteotoxic stress and has been ...
This work addresses two major unsolved questions in the field of C. elegans neuroscience and stress ...
Background: Cellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, widel...
Background: Cellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, widel...
Background: Cellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, widel...
SummaryBackgroundCellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, ...
SummaryBackgroundCellular mechanisms aimed at repairing protein damage and maintaining homeostasis, ...
Response to hyperthermia, highly conserved from bacteria to humans, involves transcriptional upregul...
To survive elevated temperatures, ectotherms adjust the fluidity of membranes by fine-tuning lipid d...
To survive elevated temperatures, ectotherms adjust the fluidity of membranes by fine-tuning lipid d...
To survive elevated temperatures, ectotherms adjust the fluidity of membranes by fine-tuning lipid d...
To survive elevated temperatures, ectotherms adjust the fluidity of membranes by fine-tuning lipid d...
Eukaryotic cells respond to heat stress by activating the transcription factor HSF1. In addition to ...
Eukaryotic cells respond to heat stress by activating the transcription factor HSF1. In addition to ...
Eukaryotic cells respond to heat stress by activating the transcription factor HSF1. In addition to ...
<div><p>The heat shock response (HSR) is essential to survive acute proteotoxic stress and has been ...
This work addresses two major unsolved questions in the field of C. elegans neuroscience and stress ...