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[
1960]
I would like to introduce my lecture on this subject with a brief consideration of meiosis in the female. The oogonial cells in the anterior part of the ovary in a nematode are small and multiply by mitosis. As they move down the ovary they increase in size with corresponding increase in the size of the nucleus. The chromatin is a single spherical mass located in the center of the nucleus. Eventually the chromatin mass is resolved into individual chromosomes. During prophase of meiosis the homologous chromosomes come together. All diploid cells possess identical chromosomes with the exception of the sex chromosomes and at synapsis these homologous chromosomes pair or come together. Paternal and maternal gametes each contribute a complement of identical chromosomes.
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[
Methods Mol Biol,
2014]
Stable isotope labeling by amino acids combined with mass spectrometry is a widely used methodology for measuring relative changes in protein and phosphorylation levels at a global level. We have applied this method to the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans in combination with RNAi-mediated gene knockdown by feeding the nematode on pre-labeled lysine auxotroph Escherichia coli. In this chapter, we describe in details the generation of the E. coli strain, incorporation of heavy isotope-labeled lysine in C. elegans, and the procedure for a comprehensive global phosphoproteomic experiment.
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[
Curr Top Dev Biol,
2012]
Noncoding RNAs have emerged as an integral part of posttranscriptional gene regulation. Among that class of RNAs are the microRNAs (miRNAs), which posttranscriptionally regulate target mRNAs containing complementary sequences. The broad presence of miRNAs in lower eukaryotes, plants, and mammals highlights their importance throughout evolution. MiRNAs have been shown to regulate many pathways, including development, and disruption of miRNA function can lead to disease (Ivey and Srivastava, 2010; Jiang et al., 2009). Although the first miRNA genes were discovered in the nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans, almost 20 years ago, the field of miRNA research began when they were found in multiple organisms a little over a decade ago (Lagos-Quintana et al., 2001; Lau et al., 2001; Lee and Ambros, 2001; Lee et al., 1993; Pasquinelli et al., 2000; Wightman et al., 1993). Here, we review one of the first characterized miRNAs,
let-7, and describe its role in development and the intricacies of its biogenesis and function.
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[
2005]
RNA interference (RNAi) is a recently discovered phenomenon in which doublestranded RNA (dsRNA) silences endogenous gene expression in a sequencespecific manner (Fire et al., 1998). Since its discovery, the use of RNAi has become widely employed in many organisms to specifically knock down gene function. RNAi shares a remarkable degree of similarity with silencing phenomena in other organisms (Cogoni et al., 1999a; Sharp, 1999). For instance, RNAi, posttranscriptional gene silencing in plants and cosuppression in fungi can all be activated by the presence of aberrant RNAs (Maine, 2000; Tijsterman et al., 2002a). Additionally, plant, worm, and fly cells or extracts undergoing RNA-mediated interference all contain small dsRNAs, around 25 nucleotides in length, identical to the sequences present in the silenced gene (Baulcombe, 1996; Hammond et al., 2000; Zamore et al., 2000; Catalanotto et al., 2000). The high degree of similarity between these RNA-mediated silencing phenomena supports the notion that they were derived from an ancient and conserved pathway used to regulate gene expression, presumably to eliminate defective RNAs and to defend against viral infections and transposons. (Zamore, 2002). Components of RNAi have also been implicated in developmental processes, suggesting that RNAi may play a broader role in regulating gene expression (Smardon et al., 2000; Knight et al., 2001; et al., Ketting et al., 2001). Although we have learned much about the general mechanisms underlying RNAi, a detailed understanding of how RNAi works remains to be elucidated. In this chapter we will discuss first the biology of RNAi, then the genes required for its function, and we will end with a discussion on recent findings that have implicated chromatin silencing in the mechanism of RNAi.
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[
Methods Mol Biol,
2011]
Quantitative proteomics aims to identify and quantify proteins in cells or organisms that have been obtained from different biological origin (e.g., "healthy vs. diseased"), that have received different treatments, or that have different genetic backgrounds. Protein expression levels can be quantified by labeling proteins with stable isotopes, followed by mass spectrometric analysis. Stable isotopes can be introduced in vitro by reacting proteins or peptides with isotope-coded reagents (e.g., iTRAQ, reductive methylation). A preferred way, however, is the metabolic incorporation of heavy isotopes into cells or organisms by providing the label, in the form of amino acids (such as in SILAC) or salts, in the growth media. The advantage of in vivo labeling is that it does not suffer from side reactions or incomplete labeling that might occur in chemical derivatization. In addition, metabolic labeling occurs at the earliest possible moment in the sample preparation process, thereby minimizing the error in quantitation. Labeling with the heavy stable isotope of nitrogen (i.e., (15)N) provides an efficient way for accurate protein quantitation. Where the application of SILAC is mostly restricted to cell culture, (15)N labeling can be used for micro-organisms as well as a number of higher (multicellular) organisms. The most prominent examples of the latter are Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila (fruit fly), two important model organisms for a range of regulatory processes underlying developmental biology. Here we describe in detail the labeling with (15)N atoms, with a particular focus on fruit flies and C. elegans. We also describe methods for the identification and quantitation of (15)N-labeled proteins by mass spectrometry and bioinformatic analysis.
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[
Methods Cell Biol,
1995]
DNA transformation assays in a whole organism provide experimental links between molecular structure and phenotype. Experiments with transgenic Caenorhabditis elegans start in general with the injection of DNA into the adult gonad. Effects on phenotype or gene expression patterns can be analyzed either in F1 progeny derived from the injected animals or in derived transgenic lines. Microinjection of C. elegans was first carried out by Kimble et al. (1982). Stinchcomb et al. (1985) then showed that injected DNA could be maintained for several generations in transgenic lines. The first selective methods for producing and maintaining transgenic lines were reported in 1986 (Fire, 1986). These methods have been considerably improved since then (Mello et al., 1991) , so that assays involving DNA transformation are now a standard part of the experimental repertoire for C. elegans.
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[
Methods Mol Biol,
2013]
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans secretes a family of water-soluble small molecules, known as the ascarosides, into its environment and uses these ascarosides in chemical communication. The ascarosides are derivatives of the 3,6-dideoxysugar ascarylose, modified with different fatty acid-derived side chains. C. elegans uses specific ascarosides, which are together known as the dauer pheromone, to trigger entry into the stress-resistant dauer larval stage. In addition, C. elegans uses specific ascarosides to control certain behaviors, including mating attraction, aggregation, and avoidance. Although in general the concentration of the ascarosides in the environment increases with population density, C. elegans can vary the types and amounts of ascarosides that it secretes depending on the culture conditions under which it has been grown and its developmental history. Here, we describe how to grow high-density worm cultures and the bacterial food for those cultures, as well as how to extract the culture medium to generate a crude pheromone extract. Then, we discuss how to analyze the types and amounts of ascarosides in that extract using mass spectrometry and NMR spectroscopy.
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[
2017]
Since their discovery in late 1970, transient receptor potential (TRP) channels have been implicated in a variety of cellular and physiological functions (Minke, 2010). The superfamily of TRP channels consists of nearly 30 members that are organized into seven major subgroups based on their specific function and sequence similarities (Owsianik et al., 2006; Ramsey et al., 2006). With the exception of TRPN channels that are only found in invertebrates and fish, mammalian genomes contain representatives of all six subfamilies: (1) TRPV (vanilloid); (2) TRPC (canonical); (3) TRPM (melastatin); (4) TRPA (ankyrin); (5) TRPML (mucolipin); and (6) TRPP (polycystin). TRP channels play crucial regulatory roles in many physiological processes, including those associated with reproductive tissues. As calcium-permeable cation channels that respond to a variety of signals (Clapham et al., 2003; Wu et al., 2010), TRP channels exert their role as sensory detectors in both male and female gametes, and play regulatory functions in germ cell development and maturation. Recent evidence obtained from Caenorhabditis elegans studies point to the importance of these proteins during fertilization where certain sperm TRP channels could migrate from a spermatozoon into an egg to ensure successful fertilization and embryo development. In this chapter we discuss how TRP channels can regulate both female and male fertility in different species and their specific roles.
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[
1969]
In order to study properly the nutrition and culture of nematodes, it is desirable to establish the organisms in axenic culture. Only in this way can the metabolic abilities of the nematodes be separated from those of coexisting and interacting organisms. One may settle for a mono-axenic culture, but the best way to attain this is to obtain axenic nematodes and then add the second organism or tissue, for example, alfalfa callus tissue for plant parasitic nematodes (Krusberg, 1961). This chapter will devote itself, in the main, to recent work on the culture and nutrition of nematodes, free-living and parasitic, and will refer only in passing to work already thoroughly reviewed (Dougherty et al., 1959; Nicholas, et al., 1959; Dougherty, 1960).
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[
Methods Cell Biol,
2012]
In Caenorhabdatis elegans as in other animals, fat regulation reflects the outcome of behavioral, physiological, and metabolic processes. The amenability of C. elegans to experimentation has led to utilization of this organism for elucidating the complex homeostatic mechanisms that underlie energy balance in intact organisms. The optical advantages of C. elegans further offer the possibility of studying cell biological mechanisms of fat uptake, transport, storage, and utilization, perhaps in real time. Here, we discuss the rationale as well as advantages and potential pitfalls of methods used thus far to study metabolism and fat regulation, specifically triglyceride metabolism, in C. elegans. We provide detailed methods for visualization of fat depots in fixed animals using histochemical stains and in live animals by vital dyes. Protocols are provided and discussed for chloroform-based extraction of total lipids from C. elegans homogenates used to assess total triglyceride or phospholipid content by methods such as thin-layer chromatography or used to obtain fatty acid profiles by methods such as gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. Additionally, protocols are provided for the determination of rates of intestinal fatty acid uptake and fatty acid breakdown by -oxidation. Finally, we discuss methods for determining rates of de novo fat synthesis and Raman scattering approaches that have recently been employed to investigate C. elegans lipids without reliance on invasive techniques. As the C. elegans fat field is relatively new, we anticipate that the indicated methods will likely be improved upon and expanded as additional researchers enter this field.