| Literature DB >> 22701701 |
Fatma Kaplan1, Hans T Alborn, Stephan H von Reuss, Ramadan Ajredini, Jared G Ali, Faruk Akyazi, Lukasz L Stelinski, Arthur S Edison, Frank C Schroeder, Peter E Teal.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dispersal is an important nematode behavior. Upon crowding or food depletion, the free living bacteriovorus nematode Caenorhabditis elegans produces stress resistant dispersal larvae, called dauer, which are analogous to second stage juveniles (J2) of plant parasitic Meloidogyne spp. and infective juveniles (IJ)s of entomopathogenic nematodes (EPN), e.g., Steinernema feltiae. Regulation of dispersal behavior has not been thoroughly investigated for C. elegans or any other nematode species. Based on the fact that ascarosides regulate entry in dauer stage as well as multiple behaviors in C. elegans adults including mating, avoidance and aggregation, we hypothesized that ascarosides might also be involved in regulation of dispersal behavior in C. elegans and for other nematodes such as IJ of phylogenetically related EPNs. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22701701 PMCID: PMC3368880 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038735
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Dispersal assay.
(A) Naturally dispersing infective juveniles (IJ) of S. feltiae from an insect cadaver. (B) Approximately 300 IJs were placed on an agar plate in water. (C) IJs were treated with either water (control) or insect cadaver extract. Images are representative of six experiments for each treatment. (D) Dispersal assay on the same plate. The illustration represents two experiments. Behavior is temperature and season dependent. Assays were conducted at RT (22±0.5°C) or under temperature controlled conditions.
Figure 2Structures of ascarosides.
Structures of published ascarosides.
Figure 3An ascaroside blend regulates C. elegans dispersal behavior, and the dispersal blend is recognized by other nematodes.
(A) Identification of the dispersal blend. Images (∼250 nematodes) are representative of 9, 10, and 11 experiments of control (0.25% E. coli (HB101)), synthetic blend with 0.25% E. coli (HB101) and dauer supernatant, respectively. (B) Quantification using Image J (http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/download.html). Control vs synthetic blend student's t-test unpaired (p<0.02). (C) S. feltiae IJs (∼250) response to the dispersal blend; four experiments for each treatment. (D) Response of root-knot J2s (Meloidogyne spp., mixture of M. incognita, M. javanica, and M. floridensis) to the C. elegans dispersal blend. The data represent 19 and 20 experiments from control water and C. elegans dispersal blend, respectively. At 2 h, using a student's t-test, unpaired, p<0.007.
Figure 4Activity guided fractionation of the S. feltiae dispersal pheromone.
(A) Reverse phase (C18) chromatography of insect cadaver extract. The image represents two independent experiments. The estimated physiologically relevant concentration was used in the assays; Frc, fraction. (B) Testing physiologically relevant concentration of ascarosides found in Frc A (ascr#9, 40.3 pmol/µl and ascr#11, 1.3 pmol/µl). Image represents three experiments. (C) Ascr#2 and ascr#9 are structural analogs. Natural and synthetic ascr#9 were tested in combination with fraction B and C. Image represents four experiments. (D) Structure of ascr#11. It (1.3 pmol/µl) is also sufficient to cause dispersal in combination with fractions B and C. Image represents three experiments.