This is a preprint.
Conserved lipid metabolic reprogramming confers hypoxic and aging resilience
- PMID: 40964255
- PMCID: PMC12439929
- DOI: 10.1101/2025.09.06.674665
Conserved lipid metabolic reprogramming confers hypoxic and aging resilience
Update in
-
Conserved lipid metabolic reprogramming confers hypoxic and aging resilience.EMBO Rep. 2025 Dec 11. doi: 10.1038/s44319-025-00664-6. Online ahead of print. EMBO Rep. 2025. PMID: 41381735
Abstract
The Arctic ground squirrel (AGS, Urocitellus parryii), an extreme hibernator, exhibits remarkable resilience to stressors like hypoxia and hypothermia, making it an ideal model for studying cellular metabolic adaptation. The underlying mechanisms of AGS resilience are largely unknown. Here, we use lipidomic and metabolomic profiling to discover specific downregulation of triglyceride lipids and upregulation of the lipid biosynthetic precursor malonic acid in AGS neural stem cells (NSC) versus murine NSCs. Inhibiting lipid biosynthesis recapitulates hypoxic resilience of squirrel NSCs. Extending this model, we find that acute exposure to hypoxia downregulates key lipid biosynthetic enzymes in C. elegans, while inhibiting lipid biosynthesis reduces mitochondrial fission and facilitates hypoxic survival. Moreover, inhibiting lipid biosynthesis protects against APOE4-induced pathologies and aging trajectories in C. elegans. These findings suggest triglyceride downregulation as a conserved metabolic resilience mechanism, offering insights into protective strategies for neural tissues under hypoxic or ischemic conditions, APOE4-induced pathologies and aging.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests The authors declare no competing interests.
Figures
References
-
- Kaelin W. G. & Ratcliffe P. J. Oxygen sensing by metazoans: the central role of the HIF hydroxylase pathway. Mol. Cell 30, 393–402 (2008). - PubMed
-
- Chmura H. E. et al. Climate change is altering the physiology and phenology of an arctic hibernator. Science 380, 846–849 (2023). - PubMed
-
- Yan J., Barnes B. M., Kohl F. & Marr T. G. Modulation of gene expression in hibernating arctic ground squirrels. Physiol. Genomics 32, 170–181 (2008). - PubMed
Publication types
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources