Abstract
Cognitive decline is a significant health concern in our aging society. Here, we used the model organism C. elegans to investigate the impact of the IIS/FOXO pathway on age-related cognitive decline. The daf-2 Insulin/IGF-1 receptor mutant exhibits a significant extension of learning and memory span with age compared to wild-type worms, an effect that is dependent on the DAF-16 transcription factor. To identify possible mechanisms by which aging daf-2 mutants maintain learning and memory with age while wild-type worms lose neuronal function, we carried out neuron-specific transcriptomic analysis in aged animals. We observed downregulation of neuronal genes and upregulation of transcriptional regulation genes in aging wild-type neurons. By contrast, IIS/FOXO pathway mutants exhibit distinct neuronal transcriptomic alterations in response to cognitive aging, including upregulation of stress response genes and downregulation of specific insulin signaling genes. We tested the roles of significantly transcriptionally-changed genes in regulating cognitive functions, identifying novel regulators of learning and memory. In addition to other mechanistic insights, comparison of the aged vs young daf-2 neuronal transcriptome revealed that a new set of potentially neuroprotective genes is upregulated; instead of simply mimicking a young state, daf-2 may enhance neuronal resilience to accumulation of harm and take a more active approach to combat aging. These findings suggest a potential mechanism for regulating cognitive function with age and offer insights into novel therapeutic targets for age-related cognitive decline.
Introduction
The loss of cognitive function is a rising problem in our aging society. A 2008 study estimated that at least 22.2% (about 5.4 million) individuals over the age of 71 in the United States have at least mild cognitive impairment1–3. Furthermore, global dementia cases are predicted to triple from an estimated 57.4 million cases in 2019 to 152.8 million cases in 20504,5. As most industrialized countries are experiencing a rapid increase in the proportion of the aged population, understanding and potentially preventing the underlying issues of neuronal structural and behavioral decline associated with aging is crucial for societal health.
C. elegans is an excellent model system for studying neuronal aging, given its tractable genetics, short lifespan, and simple nervous system6. Most importantly, C. elegans experiences rapid loss of learning and memory with age7: by Day 4 of adulthood, all long-term associative memory ability is lost, and by Day 8, C. elegans cannot carry out associative learning or short-term associative memory7 – despite the fact that these worms can still move and chemotaxis perfectly well. That is, with age worms first lose long-term memory ability (by Day 4), then short-term memory and learning ability (Day 6-8), then chemotaxis (Day 10-12), then motility (Day 16)7,8. Because learning and memory decline extremely early, we consider worms that are only a week old to already be “cognitively aged,” despite the fact that they can chemotax and move well, and will continue to live for another one to two weeks. Therefore, we can examine neurons from these 7-8 day-old adults to explore the causes of these cognitive declines in animals that are otherwise quite healthy. Many human neuronal aging phenotypes and genes of interest for mammalian neuronal function are conserved in C. elegans9, making discoveries in C. elegans possibly applicable to humans.
The Insulin/IGF-1-like signaling (IIS)/FOXO pathway was first discovered to play a role in longevity in C. elegans. The lifespan of daf-2/Insulin/IGF-1 receptor mutants is twice that of wild-type animals10, and this lifespan extension requires the downstream Forkhead box O (FOXO) transcription factor DAF-1610. DAF-16/FOXO controls the expression of many genes that contribute to longevity, including stress response, proteostasis, autophagy, antimicrobial, and metabolic genes11. As a conserved regulator, the IIS/FOXO pathway also regulates longevity in Drosophila, mice, and humans12–15. In addition to regulating lifespan, the IIS pathway regulates neuronal function via the FOXO transcription factor. In particular, C. elegans IIS/daf-2 mutants display DAF-16-dependent improved learning, short-term memory, and long-term memory7. While both young and old daf-2 adult worms display increased learning and memory relative to wild-type, the duration of this extension is not known, and the mechanisms by which daf-2 mutants maintain neuronal function in older worms is not yet understood. Compared to wild-type worms, daf-2 mutants better maintain maximum velocity8, motility16,17, neuromuscular junctions, the ability to regenerate axons18,19, and neuronal morphology with age20–22. In particular, we previously showed that while daf-2 has lower observed motility on food23, this apparent is due to its high levels of a food receptor, ODR-108, and its downregulation reveals the much higher mobility of daf-2 animals8, even on food, in addition to its much higher and maintained maximum velocity with age. Previously, we found that daf-2 worms also extend learning beyond wild-type’s ability7, but the full duration of this extension with age was not known. That is, exactly how late in life daf-2 mutants can still learn and remember, and whether this is proportional to their lifespan extension, was not previously determined.
We previously performed neuron-specific RNA-sequencing in young (Day 1) adult C. elegans and identified neuron-specific targets24; genes upregulated in daf-2 mutant neurons are distinct from those in the whole animal, and we found that these neuronal genes are necessary for the observed improvements in memory and axon regeneration in daf-2 mutant worms. However, whether daf-2 uses the same or different genes in young and old worms to improve and maintain cognitive function with age is unknown. Recent datasets using whole-animal single-cell RNA-seq have been generated for wild-type and daf-2 worms, and these are sufficient for whole-body aging and pseudobulk analyses25–27, but we have found that those data are not deep enough to use specifically for in-depth analysis of neurons, which can be difficult to gather from whole animals. Other data are from larval stages and cannot be extrapolated to aging adults28. To identify the transcriptional differences in the aging nervous system that might contribute to the loss of neuronal function with age in wild-type worms and the differences responsible for the extended abilities of daf-2 animals, here we performed RNA sequencing on FACS-isolated neurons of aged (Day 8) wild-type and IIS/FOXO mutants. To further investigate the role of the neuronal IIS/FOXO pathway, we identified genes both upregulated by the IIS/FOXO pathway, and genes that are differentially expressed in daf-2 mutants with age. We found that daf-2 differentially-regulated genes in the aged neurons are different from young neurons; in fact, many of these Day 8 daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 upregulated genes are stress response and proteolysis genes that may promote neuronal function and health. We then used functional assays to assess the contributions of daf-2-regulated genes to learning and memory. Our results suggest that daf-2’s neuronal targets in older worms are required to maintain neuronal functions with age, suggesting that additional and alternative mechanisms are at work in these aged mutants from their young counterparts.
Results
Wild-type neurons lose their neuronal function and identity with age
Previously, we found that cognitive abilities in C. elegans, including learning, short-term memory, and long-term memory, all decline with age7. Moreover, neuronal morphology and regeneration ability are also impaired with age18,20–22. However, how these phenotypes are regulated at the molecular level in aging neurons remains to be systematically characterized. Therefore, we were interested in first identifying gene expression changes with age in wild-type neurons to characterize the normal physiological aging process. Before choosing timepoints to assess neuronal transcriptome changes, we carried out associative learning and short-term associative memory assays7 as we have previously described7,29–31. Briefly, well-fed worms are starved for one hour, then re-fed while exposed to the neutral odorant butanone for one hour; a choice assay between butanone and control immediately after training tests associative learning, while a choice assay after one hour of recovery on food-only plates tests short-term associative memory7. Adult Day 1 worms are fully developed, young, and healthy, while wild-type Day 7-8 worms, although still in their mid-life, have completely lost their learning and short-term memory abilities already by Day 77 (Fig. 1a), thus we consider them “aged” for the purposes of understanding loss of cognitive ability. Therefore, we reasoned that a comparison of adult wild-type Day 1 neurons with wild-type neurons that are at least aged Day 7-8 should reveal changes with age that result in loss of cognitive function.
To identify genes that regulate age-related morphological and functional decline in wild-type neurons, we performed neuron-specific transcriptomic analysis using our previous FACS neuronal isolation method24 on six biological replicates each of Day 1 and Day 8 adult wild-type worms, where 100,000 GFP+ cells were collected for each sample (Fig. S1a-c). Because we previously found that whole-worm analyses mask changes found specifically in neurons24, to complement our aging neuron studies, we also carried out RNA-sequencing analyses of aging whole worms (Fig. S2a-e), which we found is dominated by changes in the extracellular matrix (Fig. S2b), stress response/pathogen genes (Fig. S2c) and the alimentary system (intestine) (Fig. S2d), overshadowing neuronal changes.
Principal components analysis of the FACS-isolated neuron RNA-seq samples indicated that they are well separated by age (Fig. 1b), and downsampling analysis32 (Fig. S1e) suggested that we have sequenced to saturation, with an average of 41,636,463 uniquely-counted reads and detected the expression of 19725 coding and non-coding genes (log10(TPM)>0.5) (Fig. S1d).
Enrichment analysis of genes that are differentially expressed with age (Fig. 1c-e) suggested that neuronal sorting and sequencing were successful because the sequenced genes are enriched for neuronal genes such as mec-7, mec-12, and twk-49, as expected, and less enriched for all other major tissues. Tissue enrichment analysis of differentially-expressed genes suggested that aging neurons lose genes most expressed in the nervous system and neurons (Fig. 1d), as one might expect. Gene ontology (GO) analysis suggested that genes declining with age in neurons encode proteins important in neuronal function (Fig. 1e, f), including synaptic proteins (e.g., srh-59, rab-3, sng-1, sup-1), potassium channels (e.g., egl-23, twk-7, twk-49, ncs-5), and transmembrane transporters (e.g., folt-2, ccb-2, unc-79, exp-1). The decrease in expression of these genes during aging may indicate that neurons are losing their identity and their ability to perform neuronal functions, such as signal transduction and axonal transport, and correlates with the behavioral and morphological declines observed in aging wild-type worms.
Comparing whole-worm sequencing and neuron-specific sequencing (Fig. 1f), we found that genes involved in metabolic processes decline with age only in the body, and genes encoding structural proteins, lipid localization, and muscle system processes decline with age in both the body and in neurons, while neurons specifically lose genes that are associated with neuronal function, including synaptic proteins, neuropeptide signaling, and other neuron functions, correlating with neuronal loss of function with age. Together, these results indicate that neurons harbor many unique age-related changes that could be overshadowed in the whole-worm transcriptome but are revealed by neuron-specific sequencing.
Many genes that are more highly expressed in young neurons are known to be specific to a subset of neurons. ins-6, an insulin-like peptide specific to the ASI, ASJ, and AWA neurons28 that regulates longevity33 and aversive learning34, is significantly downregulated with age (Fig. 1g). srd-23, a serpentine receptor located at the AWB neuron cilia35, also decreases expression with age (Fig. S1f). Furthermore, various genes specific to sensory neurons (txt-12, flp-33), touch neurons (mec-7), and motor neurons (unc-4) decline in expression with age (Fig. 1g, Fig. S1f).
Previous studies showed that loss of genes including ins-634, mec-736, unc-4, folt-219, madd-437, and fbf-131 lead to behavioral dysfunction in motility and chemosensory abilities; therefore, the decreased expression of these neuron type-specific genes with age may impact the function of individual neurons and disrupt neural circuit communication, ultimately contributing to the declines in behavior observed during aging (Fig. 1g).
As neurons age, genes that increase in expression, while assigned to the nervous system (Fig. 2a) are not specific for neuron function; instead, aged wild-type neurons express higher levels of many predicted F-box genes with predicted proteasome E3 activity (e.g., F-box proteins fbxa-158, fbxb-51, pes-2.1, and SKp1-related proteins skr-12, skr-6). Some transcription regulation (e.g., ced-13, tbx-43, nhr-221, end-1), and chromatin structure and function (e.g., his-54, dot-1.2, jmjd-3.2, hil-7, utx-1) genes also increase with age (Fig. 2b), even though neurons appear to lose their neuron-specific transcriptional identity with age.
One ongoing discussion about changes during aging is how to interpret an increase in expression with age. There are two main models for genes that increase their expression with age and have a resulting impact on function: that they rise with age to compensate for lost function (“compensatory”) and therefore promote function, or that their expression is deleterious to function and only rises with age through dysregulation. If a gene is compensatory, then its knockdown would abrogate learning and memory, even in young animals. If a gene’s function is harmful to neurons, reducing its expression might be beneficial to the worm, even in young animals. (Of course, there may be other scenarios in which a gene with multiple functions may be detrimental for some behaviors but beneficial for other physiological roles.) To test this hypothesis, we reduced expression of a small set of highly-upregulated candidate genes in categories that might function in a compensatory manner.
These include utx-1, a histone demethylase known to play a role in development38 and lifespan in worms39–41, and whose homolog has been implicated in cognition in mammals42,43; ins-19, an insulin-like peptide; and nmgp-1, a neuronal glycoprotein involved in chemosensation44. In each case, we see that gene expression is significantly higher in old than in young neurons (Fig. 2c, e, g). If a gene increases expression to benefit neurons, we would expect to see no difference in memory in young animals where there is no defect; by contrast, if the increase of a gene is deleterious, we would expect to see an improvement in behavior when knocked down, even in young animals. We performed adult-only neuron-specific RNAi knockdown to prevent any possible deleterious effects caused by changes during development, which largely takes place in early larval stages; testing in young adult animals is logical because there is no memory in aged wild-type, so any deleterious effect of knocking down a potentially compensatory gene in an aged would not result in a change. For all behavioral assays, we first prioritized significantly-changed genes with high fold-change, and then those with mammalian homologs.
We found that 48 hrs (L4-Day 2) of adult-only knockdown of utx-1 increases 1hr and 2hr memory (Fig. 2d), the loss-of-function mutation of ins-19 increases both learning and memory (Fig. 2f) and the adult-only knock-down of nmgp-1 extends memory at 2 hours (Fig. 2h). That is, in each of these cases, reduction of these genes did not impair memory, as loss of a compensatory function would appear; rather, loss of these age-upregulated genes improved wild-type memory. These results indicate that at least some neuronal genes that increase with age can have a negative impact on learning and memory, as demonstrated by the improvement of memory when knocked down, even in young animals. While it is still possible that some upregulated genes may act in a compensatory manner, the simplest model is that at least some are actively deleterious for learning and memory. We previously observed that for genes that play a role in complex behaviors like learning and memory, the loss of single genes can have a large impact on these complex behaviors60, unlike the additive roles of longevity-promoting genes 11. Therefore, one mechanism by which wild-type worms lose their learning and memory functions with age is not just by loss of neuronal gene expression, as one might expect, but also by dysregulation of expression of genes that can negatively impact learning and memory.
daf-2 mutants maintain learning and memory with age
We previously found that daf-2 animals have extended motility (Maximum Velocity) that correlates with and predicts their extension of lifespan8. Additionally, not only do young daf-2 worms have better memory than wild-type worms, but daf-2 mutants also maintain learning and memory better with age7,24. However, the duration of this improvement was unknown. To determine the proportion of life that worms can learn and remember, we tested wild-type, daf-2, and daf-16;daf-2 worms for their learning and associative memory ability every day until these functions were lost. We found that while wild-type worms lose their learning and short-term memory abilities by Day 7-8 (Fig. 1a, Fig. 3a, b), learning and memory span were significantly extended in daf-2 mutants (Fig. 3a, b); thus, a comparison of daf-2 neurons with wild-type neurons at Day 8 should reveal differences relevant to cognitive aging. The extension of learning and memory is dependent on the FOXO transcription factor DAF-16 (Fig. 3a); in fact, while daf-16;daf-2 mutants still have the ability to learn for a few days, these mutants are completely unable to carry out any memory ability, even on Day 1. Thus, learning ability, which is similar in wild-type and daf-2;daf-16 mutants, is mechanistically distinct from short-term memory ability31. daf-2 worms maintained learning ability until Day 19 and short-term (1hr) memory ability until Day 15, more than twice the duration of wild-type worms, while daf-16;daf-2 worms exhibit no short-term memory ability, even on Day 1 of adulthood (Fig. 3b). Our data suggest that the learning span-to-lifespan (Fig. S3c) and memory span-to-lifespan ratios in daf-2 worms were similar to or slightly higher than that of wild-type worms (Fig. 3c, d), indicating that daf-2 mutants maintain cognitive function for at least proportionally as long as wild-type worms do. Thus, daf-2 mutants maintain their higher cognitive quality of life longer than wild-type worms, while daf-16;daf-2 mutants spend their whole lives without memory ability (Fig. 3d), in contrast to claims that daf-2 mutants are less healthy than wild-type or daf-16 worms23. Additionally it should be noted that because our choice assays distinguish motility function from learning and memory function29, the improvements in memory with age shown by daf-2 mutants relative to wild type are distinct from daf-2’s improvements in motility that we previously showed8. Therefore, we are interested in these genes that might contribute to the extended cognitive function that daf-2 worms demonstrate.
Aging IIS/FOXO neurons express stress-resistance genes to maintain neuronal function with age
To identify genes that may improve memory and slow cognitive aging in long-lived daf-2 mutants, we compared the transcriptional profiles of Day 8 FACS-isolated neurons from daf-2 animals with Day 8 FACS-isolated wild-type and daf-16;daf-2 neurons; by Day 8, wild-type and daf-16;daf-2 worms have already lost their learning and memory ability, but daf-2 worms still maintain their cognitive functions (Fig. 3a, b). It should be noted that wild-type worms still have normal chemotaxis and motility at Day 87, and there is a separation of several days between the loss of cognitive functions and the loss of motility7; therefore, comparison of the neuronal transcriptomes of daf-2 with wild type and daf-16;daf-2 at this age should specifically highlight genes that are required for learning and memory rather than other functions.
The PCA of the daf-2, daf-16;daf-2, and wild-type neuronal Day 8 transcriptomes (Fig. 3e) indicates that aged daf-16;daf-2 mutant neurons are similar to aged wild-type neurons, correlating well with their similarly worsened cognitive functions at this age; that is, at a transcriptomic level, aged (Day 8) wild-type neurons and aged daf-16;daf-2 neurons are similar, which is echoed by their shared inability to carry out learning and memory by Day 8 of adulthood (Fig. 3ea, b). By contrast, the transcriptomes of aged daf-2 mutant neurons are distinct from both aged wild-type and aged daf-16;daf-2 neuron transcriptomes, just as the cognitive abilities of daf-2 are much greater than wild type or daf-16;daf-2 at this age.
Downsampling analysis shows that our sequencing depth is sufficient to saturate the detectable differential expression (Fig. S3g, h). We obtained an average of 47,233,119 counted reads per sample (Supplemental Table 5) and detected the expression of 16,488 coding and non-coding genes (Fig. S3e).
We identified 570 upregulated and 814 downregulated genes in Day 8 daf-2 neurons compared to Day 8 daf-16;daf-2 neurons (Fig. 3f). A large fraction of the downregulated genes in Day 8 daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 neurons are “nematode-specific peptide family” (nspc-) genes of unknown function (Fig. 3f). While the daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 changes in whole worms largely replicated the results from our previous studies of young animals11,45 (Fig. 3g, Fig S6g), comparison of the daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 differential transcriptional changes in Day 8 whole worms and Day 8 neurons reveal shared (174 genes) and neuron-specific gene expression changes (396 genes; dod-24, srh-2, lin-42, etc.) (Fig. 3h, Fig. S4c). Not surprisingly, previously-identified genes from whole-worm daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 and N2 (e.g., sod-3, mtl-1, cpi-1, hsp-12.6, etc.) that play roles in both neurons and other tissues even in Day 1 daf-2 mutants appear in the shared list. (Some neuron-specific Day 8 daf-2-upregulated genes have not been reported to be expressed in neurons previously (e.g., spin-2), further suggesting the value of transcriptomic analyses of isolated neurons in mutant backgrounds at this age.)
Many genes upregulated in Day 8 daf-2 neurons relative to daf-16;daf-2 are related to stress responses, including heat stress (e.g., hsp-12.6, hsp-12.3, F08H9.4/hsp), oxidative stress (e.g., sod-3), and metal stress genes (e.g., mtl-1); and proteolysis (e.g., cpi-1, cpr-2, and tep-1). The upregulation of these genes may perform neuroprotective functions, as their homologs in mammals have been shown to do (Table 1). Specifically, 36 of the top 100 upregulated genes have identified orthologs or identified domains with known function, of which 32 of (89%) have functions in promoting neuronal health. These mammalian homologs protect neurons against protein aggregation and harmful metabolites (e.g., cpi-1, alh-2, ttr-41, gpx-5)46–50, maintain synaptic organization and neuronal homeostasis (e.g., dod-24, ptr-19, plep-1)51–53, facilitate neuronal injury repair (e.g., F08H9.4, sod-3)54,55, and maintain normal neuronal function (e.g., lgc-28, slc-36.3, lin-42)56–59. Together, these genes may help maintain daf-2’s neuronal health and protect neurons from accumulation of environmental harm during aging.
We found that about a third of the daf-2-upregulated genes were shared between the daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 analysis and the daf-2 vs N2 analysis (338 genes) (Fig. S5). Of the unshared genes, the daf-2-maintained genes that are specific to the daf-2 vs N2 comparison are bZIP transcription factors, including zip-5, zip-4, atf-2, and proteasome components (Figure S6D).
These results indicate that other transcription factors may participate in regulating daf-2 functions in aged neurons in addition to the daf-16/FOXO transcription factor.
IIS/FOXO transcriptomic changes are necessary for daf-2 mutant’s improved neuronal functions
We were interested not only in the genes that remained upregulated with age, but also in genes that might have increased with age in the high-performing daf-2 mutants. That is, are there genes that increase in expression in daf-2 mutants that are necessary or beneficial for their continued high performance with age? Some of the Day 8 daf-2 vs wild-type or daf-16;daf-2 upregulated genes are also Class 1 DAF-16-dependent genes11 (sod-3, hsp-12.3, fat-5, and mtl-1, hil-1, and dao-2). However, many more genes were differentially expressed in Day 8 daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 neurons from our Day 1 data24 (Fig. 4a, Fig. S4d). Of the “new” genes – that is, genes upregulated specifically in neurons of Day 8 vs Day 1 of daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 – many have mammalian homologs that have been shown to play neuroprotective roles, by protecting against aggregation proteins and harmful metabolites, maintaining synaptic organization, neuronal homoeostasis, or neuronal activity, or facilitating neuronal injury repair (see Table 1 for specific references).
If the upregulated genes in aged daf-2 neurons are responsible for the extended memory span of daf-2 mutants, knocking down those genes should block older daf-2 mutants’ memory functions. Therefore, we tested the effect of RNAi knockdown of the top fold-change candidate genes on daf-2’s memory in aged adults. We chose Day 6 for testing because by then, like on Day 8, wild-type worms have already lost their learning and most memory abilities, but daf-2 worms retain normal cognitive functions, and this time point avoids the increased naïve chemotaxis that we observe in older daf-2 animals. As shown in Fig. 4b-c, we selected these significantly differentially-expressed candidate genes based on their ranking in fold-change.
Previously, we have found that the top significantly differentially-expressed genes (by fold-change) are most likely to have strong effects on function, while less differentially-changed genes have less of an effect11,24,60, therefore we prioritized genes that are significantly different and the most highly expressed in daf-2 mutants compared to daf-16;daf-2 mutants for subsequent testing (Fig. 4c). daf-2 worms, including neurons, are susceptible to RNA interference24,61. Of the eight candidate genes we tested, the reduction of three of them (F08H9.4, mtl-1, and dod-24, originally classified as a Class II gene with proposed immune activity) significantly decreased daf-2’s learning ability on Day 6 (Fig. 4d). Those genes plus reduction of two additional genes (C44B7.5 and alh-2) affected 1hr memory (Fig. 4e) in Day 6 daf-2 mutants. That is, knockdown of the heat shock-related gene F08H9.4, the innate immunity gene dod-24, aldehyde dehydrogenase alh-2 and previously uncharacterized gene C44B7.5 are required to some degree for daf-2’s extended memory ability. The reduction of the metal stress gene mtl-1, which is expressed in neurons as well as the rest of the body, had a slight effect on learning and memory.
One caveat of these experiments is that, while we found these genes through the isolation of neurons from aged worms and subsequent RNA-sequencing, the knockdown of the genes and its effects are not necessarily neuron-autonomous; however, alh-2 and F08H9.4 were reported to only be expressed in neurons and the cephalic sheath cell62, and C44B7.5 and dod-24, while expressed more broadly, were not upregulated in daf-2 in the whole-worm analysis (Fig. 3f), therefore their effects are most likely neuron-autonomous. In fact, dod-24 is one of the original Class 2 daf-2-downregulated genes from whole-animal analyses, suggesting that dod-24’s increase in expression is specifically in neurons, therefore the effect of its knockdown is most likely to be neuron-autonomous.
Together, these data suggest that the specific genes that are differentially regulated in Day 8 daf-2 mutants may aid in slowing neuronal function decline and behavioral changes associated with aging. Furthermore, memory maintenance with age might require additional genes that function in promoting stress resistance and neuronal resilience, which were not previously uncovered in analyses of young animals.
Discussion
Although it has been shown previously that daf-2 worms maintain various functions with age, how long they can maintain learning and memory with age, and the genes that might be responsible for these extended neuronal functions, have not been previously explored. Here we have found that daf-2 worms maintain learning and memory abilities proportional with (or even slightly beyond) their degree of lifespan extension, underscoring daf-2’s improved healthspan8.
To understand how memory is lost with age and retained in insulin/IGF-1-like signaling mutants, we have characterized the neuronal transcriptomes of aged wild-type worms and IIS (daf-2) and IIS/FOXO (daf-16;daf-2) mutants (Fig. 5). We found that wild-type neuronal aging is characterized by a downregulation of neuronal function genes and an upregulation of proteolysis genes and transcriptional and epigenetic regulators, which together may help explain the loss of neuronal identity and function with age. We also identified the transcriptomic profile accompanying daf-2’s extended learning and memory span. Specifically, daf-2 neurons maintain higher expression of stress response genes and predicted neuronal homeostasis functions (Table 1), which may help make them more resistant to environmental adversities and age-related decline. We also identified genes responsible for wild-type worms’ worsened learning and memory with age.
By employing a FACS-based neuron-sorting technique, we selectively analyzed adult neuron-function-related genes and investigated their aging process, which is not easily discernible through whole-worm sequencing25–27 (Fig. S6). Sequencing many biological repeats of aging neurons to high depth with ribosomal RNA depletion allowed us to detect a larger number of genes compared to other neuron-related bulk and single-cell sequencing profiles26, providing a deep transcriptomic dataset of aged wild-type, IIS mutant, and IIS/FOXO mutant neurons. Our analysis allowed us to identify differentially-expressed genes that are known to be expressed in at a small number of neurons, even for low-abundance genes. Notably, our sequencing results uncovered genes previously not known to be expressed in neurons that remained undetected in other datasets. Moreover, we revealed the involvement of known neuronal genes in the aging process, such as ins-6 and srd-23. We hope that this dataset will become a valuable resource for detecting new candidates in neuronal aging.
For example, dod-24, which we observed to be upregulated in daf-2 neurons and required for daf-2’s extended memory, was downregulated in the daf-2 whole-worm transcriptome (Fig. S4c). dod-24 has been traditionally classified as a Class II gene that is downregulated in daf-2 worms and upregulated by daf-16 RNAi treatment11,45. Functionally, it has been shown to be an innate immunity gene upregulated during pathogen infection63–65, and its whole-body reduction has been shown to extend the lifespan of wild-type animals11. However, here we find that dod-24 is beneficial in the nervous system and required for daf-2’s extended learning and memory in aged worms. This intriguing contrast between the whole-worm transcriptome and the neuron-specific transcriptome suggests that some genes may have distinct regulatory roles in the nervous system, necessitating a more precise approach beyond whole-worm transcriptomics.
Using this neuron-specific sequencing profile of aged cells, we identified key pathways that change during neuron aging. Our sequencing of aged neurons uncovered active transcriptomic alterations during aging, resulting in not just transcriptional silencing but also upregulation of various pathways. We found that the Day 8 daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 neuronal differentially-expressed genes that we have newly discovered here differ from the neuronal Day 1 daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 dataset we previously obtained24. These Day 8 differentially-expressed genes are not canonical neuronal genes, such as receptors and ion channels; instead, there are more metabolic and proteolytic genes whose protein orthologs have been shown to be neuroprotective. All top 50 genes and 90% of the top 100 genes with identified mammalian orthologs have been shown to be essential to neuronal functions in mammals (Table 1). These results indicate that instead of simply mimicking a young state, daf-2 may enhance neuron’s resilience to accumulation of harm and take a more active approach to combat aging. These changes suggest that daf-2’s extended memory maintenance may require different mechanisms than function in young animals; daf-2 may maintain neuronal function not just by retaining a youthful transcriptome, but also by increasing the expression of genes that promote resilience, such as stress-response genes and proteolysis inhibitors.
In addition to examining aging in wild-type and IIS/FOXO mutants independently, our results further linked the normal aging process to altered gene regulation in the IIS pathway. utx-1, nmgp-1, and ins-19 increase in expression in aged neurons, and we found that their reduction improved memory, indicating that at least some of the genes whose expression rises with age can have a negative impact on normal cognitive functions, rather than acting in a compensatory manner. utx-1 is an H3K27me3 histone demethylase we found to be higher in wild-type aged neurons, but it is also involved in the IIS pathway. The downregulation of utx-1 has been shown to regulate development38 and promote longevity39–41, and its mammalian homolog has been implicated in regulating cognitive abilities42,43. The longevity response of utx-1 depends on daf-1639–41. The loss of utx-1 decreases methylation on the daf-2 gene, thus increasing DAF-16’s nuclear localization, mimicking a daf-2 mutation39. This example of the crosstalk between normal aging and IIS/FOXO mutants offers valuable insights into modifying the aging process for enhanced longevity and cognitive health.
We found that the insulin-like peptide ins-19 was upregulated in aged neurons and was downregulated in aged daf-2 neurons, and its downregulation in wild-type worms extended memory span. Insulin-like peptides play crucial roles as receptor ligands (in both agonist and antagonist roles) for DAF-2, and we have found them to be downregulated in daf-2 mutants compared with daf-16;daf-2 mutants, possibly creating a feedback loop that dampens the insulin signaling pathway, as was previously shown for ins-7 and ins-1811,66. These peptides exhibit diverse functions in development, dauer formation, and longevity11,66–70. Notably, certain insulin-like peptides have been linked to neuronal activities, such as the regulation of aversive learning by the two antagonistic peptides ins-6 and ins-734, and reduced long-term learning and memory by ins-22 RNAi60. In our study, the expression changes of ins-19 during wild-type aging and in daf-2 mutants provide an example of how longevity mutants can reverse wild-type transcriptional changes during aging, ultimately reducing behavioral and functional decline.
Summary of mechanistic insights
Our analysis of transcriptomes from isolated aged Day 8 neurons of wild-type, daf-2, and daf-16;daf-16 mutants reveal several major mechanistic insights. Specifically, we found that wild-type neurons lose their neuronal identity through a combination of the loss of neuron-specific function genes with age, and the concomitant dysregulated increase in non-neuronal genes with age. Furthermore, at least a fraction of the top-upregulated genes with age can play deleterious roles; that is, they rise with age, and their knockdown improves function, even in young animals. This argues against the idea that all of these genes are playing a compensatory role with age.
We also found that the knockdown of individual top-ranked genes that function in learning and memory can have a large impact - like removing a cog of a machine. This is in contrast to our earlier findings regarding gene reduction in lifespan, where most cellular longevity processes regulated by DAF-16 activity appear to be additive, and therefore loss of individual major genes downstream of DAF-2 and DAF-16 have at most a 5-10% impact11. Several of these genes we found to be required for daf-2’s age-related improvement in learning and memory - namely dod-24, F08H9.4, C44B7.5, and alh-2 – were previously not associated with memory function. Finally, these genes are distinct from the set of upregulated Day 1 daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 genes; how they each individually maintain neuronal function better with age will be interesting to dissect.
Conclusions
Beyond our sequencing analysis, we have established links between genomics, function, and behavior. We also identified several new genes required for daf-2’s age-related improvement in learning and memory, shedding light on their neuron-specific roles. These additional findings further suggest that neuronal sequencing datasets can be used to identify functional candidates and pathways during the aging process. By bridging the gap between transcriptomic landscapes, genetic regulation, and functional outcomes, our study provides a greater understanding of the mechanisms underlying neuronal aging, providing insights into development of aging interventions.
Methods
Strains and worm cultivation
N2 (wild type), OH441: otIs45(unc-119::GFP), CQ295: otIs45(unc-119::GFP);daf-2(e1370), CQ296: otIs45(unc-119::GFP) ;daf-16(mu86);daf-2(e1370), LC108: uIs69 (myo-2p::mCherry + unc-119p::sid-1), CQ705: daf-2(e1370) III, 3X outcrossed, CQ745: daf-2(e1370) III; vIs69 [pCFJ90(Pmyo-2::mCherry + Punc-119::sid-1)] V, QL188: ins-19(tm5155) II, CX3695: kyIs140(str-2::GFP + lin-15(+)), CQ461: (daf-2(e1370);Pmec-4::mCherry) and CQ501: (daf-2 (e1370);zip-5(gk646);Pmec-4::mCherry). Strains were grown on high-growth media (HGM) plates seeded with E. coli OP50 bacteria using standard methods 71.
Tissue-specific isolation
For neuronal isolation, five plates of fully-grown worms from HG plates were synchronized by hypochlorite treatment, eggs spread on seeded plates to hatch, and at least five plates/replicate were grown to L4 on HGM plates until transferred to HGM plates with FUdR to avoid progeny contamination. This gives us ∼6000 healthy Day 8 worms to sort. Neuron isolation and Fluorescent-activated cell sorting were carried out as previously described 24,62.
Briefly, worms were treated with 1000uL lysis buffer (200 mM DTT, 0.25% SDS, 20 mM HEPES pH 8.0, 3% sucrose) for 6.5 mins to break the cuticle. Then worms were washed and resuspended in 500uL 20mg/mL pronase from Streptomyces griseus (Sigma-Aldrich). Worms were incubated at room temperature with mechanical disruption by pipetting until no whole-worm bodies were seen, and then ice-cold osmolarity adjusted L-15 buffer(Gibco) with 2% Fetal Bovine Serum (Gibco) were added to stop the reaction. Prior to sorting, cell suspensions were filtered using a 5um filter and sorted using a FACSVantage SE w/ DiVa (BD Biosciences; 488nm excitation, 530/30nm bandpass filter for GFP detection). Sorting gates were determined by comparing with age-matched, genotype-matched non-fluorescent cell suspension samples. Fluorescent neuron cells were directly sorted into Trizol LS. 100,000 GFP+ cells were collected for each sample.
RNA extraction, library generation and sequencing
We used standard trizol-chloroform-isopropanol method to extract RNA, then performed RNA cleanup using RNeasy MinElute Cleanup Kit (Qiagen). RNA quality was assessed using the Agilent Bioanalyzer RNA Pico chip, and bioanalyzer RIN>6.0 samples were observed before library generation. 2ng of RNA was used for library generation using Ovation SoLo RNA-Seq library preparation kit with AnyDeplete Probe Mix-C. elegans (Tecan Genomics) according to the manufacturer’s instructions 72. Library quality and concentration was assessed using Agilent Bioanalyzer DNA 12000 chip. Samples were multiplexed and sequencing were performed using NovaSeq S1 100nt Flowcell v1.5 (Illumina).
Data processing
FastQC was performed on each sample for quality control analysis. RNA STAR package was used for mapping paired-end reads to the C. elegans genome ce11 (UCSC Feb 2013) using the gene model ws245genes.gtf. Length of the genomic sequence around annotated junctions is chosen as read length -1. 50-70% reads were uniquely mapped. Reads uniquely mapped to the genome were then counted using htseq-count (mode = union). DESeq2 analysis was then used for read normalization and differential expression analysis on counted reads 73. Genes with a log10TPM >0.5 were considered as detected and genes with a log2(fold-change) > 0.5 and p-adjusted <0.05 are considered differentially expressed in further analysis. Gene ontology analysis were performed using gprofiler74 or WormCat 2.075 and category 2 was selected to show. Tissue query was performed on top 500 highest fold-change genes, using worm tissue query website (www.worm.princeton.edu)62, and only major systems were selected in the analysis.
Learning and Memory Experiments
We performed Short-Term Associative Memory (STAM) experiments as previously described 7,29. Briefly, we used five plates of synchronized adult worms/sample to perform each experiment. One plate of worms was used to test naïve chemotaxis assay without conditioning, while the other 3 plates were washed into M9, and washed 3 additional times to get rid of the bacteria. These worms are starved for 1hr to prime them for food uptake. Then these worms are transferred to conditioning plates with NGM plates seeded with OP50 and 10% butanone stripes on the lid for 1hr to perform conditioning. After conditioning, worms are either transferred from the conditioning plate directly to the chemotaxis plates to assess learning, or transferred to holding plate for 1hr or 2hrs to assess for memory. After staying on holding plates for 1hr or 2hrs, worms are then transferred onto chemotaxis plates to assess for short-term memory. Chemotaxis assays were performed by transferring worms onto chemotaxis plates with 1uL 10% butanone and 1uL ethanol spots separated by 8cm on a 10cm NGM plate. Worms who have reached either butanone spot or the ethanol spot are paralyzed by the 1uL 7.5% NaN3 on these spots. For each timepoint, 5 chemotaxis plates are used to minimize the variation of the outcome. We performed this chemotaxis assay to butanone on naïve and appetitive-trained worms at different time points to assess change in preference to butanone. Chemotaxis index is calculated as (# of worms at butanone-# of worms at ethanol)/(total # of worms - # of worms at origin).
Learning index is calculated by subtracting trained chemotaxis index with naïve chemotaxis index.
For learning and memory span assays, we obtained synchronized worms from hypochlorite-treated eggs. Synchronized worms were washed onto 5’-fluorodeoxyuridine (FUdR) at L4 and maintained on FUdR plates by transferring to new plates every 2 days. 1 Day Prior to experiments, worms are washed onto fresh HG plates without FUdR to avoid change in behavior caused by FUdR. To verify that FUdR has no effect on short-term memory, we compared worms with and without FUdR (Fig. S6d), and found no differences. For utx-1 and nmgp-1 RNAi experiments, synchronized L4 wild-type worms were washed onto HGM plates with carbenicillin and IPTG and seeded with HT115 RNAi bacteria containing the RNAi constructs from the Ahringer Library. For daf-2 upregulated candidates’ RNAi experiments, synchronized L4 daf-2 RNAi-sensitive worms were washed onto HGM plates added with carbenicillin, FUdR, and isopropyl-b-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) and seeded with HT115 bacteria containing RNAi constructs generated from the Ahringer RNAi Library, then were transferred onto fresh RNAi plates every 2 days until Day 6. 1 Day Prior to experiments, worms are transferred onto plates without FUdR.
Quantitative and Statistical Analysis
All experimental analysis was performed using Prism 8 software. Two-way ANOVA with Tukey post-hoc tests were used to compare the learning curve between control and experimental groups. One-way ANOVA followed by Dunnet post-hoc tests for multiple comparisons was performed to compare learning or 2hr memory between various treatment groups and control. Chi-square test was performed to compare the neuron morphology change between young and aged AWC neurons. All GO term analysis were perform using Wormcat 2.0 software with Bonferroni corrected adjusted p-values. Venn diagram overlaps were compared using the hypergeometric test. Differential expression analysis of RNA-seq were performed using DESeq2 algorithm and adjusted p-values were generated with Wald test using Benjamini and Hochberg method (BH-adjusted p values). Additional statistical details of experiments, including sample size (with n representing the number of chemotaxis assays performed for behavior, RNA collections for RNA-seq, and the number of worms for microscopy), can be found in the methods and figure legends. Regression analyses were performed using sklearn packages. Correlations were calculated using the SciPy packages.
Data availability
Sequencing reads are deposited at NCBI BioProject under accession number PRJNA999305.
Code availability
Analysis codes generated from this study are available upon request.
Resource availability
Further information and requests for resources and reagents should be directed to and will be fulfilled by Coleen T. Murphy (ctmurphy@princeton.edu).
Acknowledgements
We thank the Caenorhabditis Genetics Center (CGC) for strains, WormBase (version WS289) for information, Jasmine Ashraf, William Keyes, Yichen Weng, and Titas Sengupta for help with the experiments, R. Arey and other Murphy lab members for an early replicate of daf-2 learning and memory with age, members of the Murphy Lab for input on the manuscript, Christina DeCoste, Katherine Rittenbach and the Flow Cytometry Facility for cell sorting assistance, Wei Wang and the Genomics Facility for sequencing assistance, Lance Parsons, Bruce Wang, and Chen Dan for insights on data analysis, and Biorender.com for schematic design. C.T.M. is the Director of the Simons Collaboration on Plasticity in the Aging Brain (SCPAB), which supported the work, and the Glenn Center for Aging Research at Princeton. Y.W. and S.Z. are supported by China Scholarship Council (CSC). K.M. is supported by HHMI Gilliam Fellows Program.
Competing interests
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Supplemental Figures
Table S1: Whole-worm DEseq2 results
Table S2: Neuronal WT Day 1 vs Day 8 DEseq2
Table S3: Neuronal Day 8 daf-2 vs daf-16;daf-2 DEseq2
Table S4: Neuronal Day 8 daf-2 vs N2 DEseq2
Table S5: Neuronal Day 8 daf-16;daf-2 vs N2 DEseq2
Table S6: Number of sequencing reads
Table S7: Raw behavioral data
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