How to Kill a Tardigrade - Without Even Trying

2018 
Tardigrades are small aquatic animals that are known for their ability to tolerate extreme dessication as well as ionizing radiation. The extent to which different tardigrade species are able to survive extreme doses of radiation has been previously defined, yet the molecular mechanisms underlying such radiation resistance has not been fully characterized. In Ramazzottius varieornatus, high dose radiation resistance been attributed to the presence of a tardigrade-unique DNA-associated protein Dsup, a protein that facilitates in the reduction of DNA fragmentation immediately after radiation exposure. This suggests that tardigrades possess a unique set of proteins that confer enhanced DNA protection as opposed to DNA repair. Previous studies have suggested that tolerance to radiation resistance in the tardigrade Hypsibius dujardini is inversely correlated with cellular division and mitotic activity, yet the molecular mechanisms and identities of such radiation resistance are poorly understood. In the current study, we plan to examine DNA damage by X-ray irradiation of metabolically active Hypsibius dujardini at three different developmental stages (egg, juvenile and adult) to quantitate the relative amount of double-strand breaks per unit DNA. These values will be compared to quantitation using Deinococcus radiodurans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, at similar X-ray doses. X-ray exposure of D. radiodurans induces many double-stranded DNA breaks from which recovers by efficient repair. S. cerevisiae is not inherently radiation tolerant. Protection of DNA would be evidenced by reduced numbers of DNA double strand breaks in H. dujardini per unit DNA relative to the other two species.
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