RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 C. elegans HIF-1 is broadly required for survival in hydrogen sulfide JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 174581 DO 10.1101/174581 A1 Irini Topalidou A1 Dana L Miller YR 2017 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/08/10/174581.abstract AB Hydrogen sulfide is common in the environment, and is also endogenously produced by animal cells. Although hydrogen sulfide is often toxic, exposure to low levels of hydrogen sulfide improves outcome in a variety of mammalian models of ischemia-reperfusion injury. In Caenorhabditis elegans, the initial transcriptional response to hydrogen sulfide depends on the hif-1 transcription factor, and hif-1 mutant animals die when exposed to hydrogen sulfide. In this study, we use rescue experiments to identify tissues in which hif-1 is required to survive exposure to hydrogen sulfide. We find that expression of hif-1 from the unc-14 promoter is sufficient to survive hydrogen sulfide. Although unc-14 is generally considered to be a pan-neuronal promoter, we show that it is active in many non-neuronal cells as well. Using other promoters, we show that pan-neuronal expression of hif-1 is not sufficient to survive exposure to hydrogen sulfide. Our data suggest that hif-1 is required in many different tissues to direct the essential response to hydrogen sulfide.