eat-2;egl-9

Lifespan changes: From wild type to eat-2;egl-9

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Genetic mutants with eat-2, egl-9 alterations

    Names of genes are ordered alphabetically. For the order of interventions, please see the specific paper.
  • Temperature °C

    25

  • Diet

    OP50

  • Lifespan (days)

    15.0

  • Lifespan change (compared to wild type)

    2.74%

  • Phenotype

    The egl-9 mutation significantly suppressed the lifespan extension by a strong loss-of-function allele of eat-2. This suggests that EGL-9 is an important regulator of longevity due to a genetic mimic of DR by the eat-2 mutant.

  • Lifespan comparisons

    Double mutant eat-2(ad1116);egl-9(sa307) has a lifespan of 15.0 days, while single mutant eat-2(ad1116) has a lifespan of 18.2 days, single mutant egl-9(sa307) has a lifespan of 14.5 days and wild type has a lifespan of 14.6 days.

  • Type of interaction
    See methods

    Opposite lifespan effects of single mutants

  • Citation
    View abstract

    Chen D et al., 2009, HIF-1 modulates dietary restriction-mediated lifespan extension via IRE-1 in Caenorhabditis elegans. PLoS Genet. 5(5):e1000486 PubMed 19461873 Click here to select all mutants from this PubMed ID in the graph

Search genes: eat-2 egl-9
  • Entrez ID
  • Symbol
  • GenAge
  • Wormbase ID

Neuronal acetylcholine receptor subunit eat-2


Locus: CELE_Y48B6A.4


Wormbase description: eat-2 encodes a ligand-gated ion channel subunit most closely related to the non-alpha-subunits of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR); EAT-2 functions postsynaptically in pharyngeal muscle to regulate the rate of pharyngeal pumping; eat-2 is also required for normal life span and defecation; a functional EAT-2::GFP fusion protein localizes to two small dots near the junction of pharyngeal muscles pm4 and pm5, which is the site of the posterior-most MC motor neuron processes and the MC synapse; eat-2 genetically interacts with eat-18, which encodes a predicted novel transmembrane protein expressed in pharyngeal muscle and required for proper function of pharyngeal nicotonic receptors.


  • Entrez ID
  • Symbol
  • GenAge
  • Wormbase ID

Hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase


Locus: CELE_F22E12.4


Wormbase description: egl-9 encodes a proline hydroxylase; EGL-9 functions in a conserved hypoxia-sensing pathway to negatively regulate HIF-1 (hypoxia inducible factor) by hydroxylating prolyl HIF-1 residues; EGL-9 activity is negatively regulated by its physical association with CYSL-1, a protein with similarity to cysteine synthases that acts to transduce information about the environmental O2 levels through H2S (hydrogen sulfide) signaling.


Orthologs of eat-2;egl-9 in SynergyAge
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Orthologs of eat-2 in SynergyAge
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Orthologs of egl-9 in SynergyAge
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About

SynergyAge database hosts high-quality, manually curated information about the synergistic and antagonistic lifespan effects of genetic interventions in model organisms, also allowing users to explore the longevity relationships between genes in a visual way.

Read more about SynergyAge database

How to cite us

If you would like to cite this database please use:

Bunu, G., Toren, D., Ion, C. et al. SynergyAge, a curated database for synergistic and antagonistic interactions of longevity-associated genes. Sci Data 7, 366 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-020-00710-z

Contact
Robi Tacutu, Ph.D.
Head: Systems Biology of Aging Group, Bioinformatics & Structural Biochemistry Department
Institute of Biochemistry, Ground floor
Splaiul Independentei 296, Bucharest, Romania
Email:

Group webpage: www.aging-research.group