Hydrogen sulfide (HS) has dramatic physiological effects on animals that are associated with improved survival. C. elegans grown in HS are long-lived and thermotolerant. To identify mechanisms by which adaptation to HS effects physiological functions, we have measured transcriptional responses to HS exposure. Using microarray analysis we observe rapid changes in the abundance of specific mRNAs. The number and magnitude of transcriptional changes increased with the duration of HS exposure. Functional annotation suggests that genes associated with protein homeostasis are upregulated upon prolonged exposure to HS. Previous work has shown that the hypoxia-inducible transcription factor, HIF-1, is required for survival in HS. In fact, we show that
hif-1 is required for most, if not all, early transcriptional changes in HS. Moreover, our data demonstrate that SKN-1, the C. elegans homologue of NRF2, also contributes to HS-dependent changes in transcription. We show that these results are functionally important, as
skn-1 is essential to survive exposure to HS. Our results suggest a model in which HIF-1 and SKN-1 coordinate a broad transcriptional response to HS that culminates in a global reorganization of protein homeostasis networks.