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Resources » Paper

Bifarin, O.O. et al. (2017) International Worm Meeting "Systems Biology of Caenorhabditis elegans Glycosyltransferases."

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  • Overview

    Status:
    Publication type:
    Meeting_abstract
    WormBase ID:
    WBPaper00051742

    Bifarin, O.O., Taujale, R., Zhang, S., Tayyari, F., Gouveia, G., & Edison, A.S. (2017). Systems Biology of Caenorhabditis elegans Glycosyltransferases presented in International Worm Meeting. Unpublished information; cite only with author permission.

    Glycosyltransferases (GTs) catalyze the transfer of glycosyl groups from sugar substrate donors to a host of acceptor substrates - oligosaccharides, monosaccharides, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids, and other small molecules; effectively GTs catalyze glycosidic bond formation between these multifarious possibilities of molecules. Numerous studies show that GTs are important for developmental and physiological processes in C. elegans (Berninsone, 2006). However, most GTs have not yet been empirically validated. C. elegans utilizes GTs for critical functions, including pheromone signaling with ascarosides and the detoxification pathways, though identities of GTs regulating these functions remain unknown. C. elegans controls much of its behavior and development through the use of ascarosides, which are also present in many free-living and parasitic nematodes (Choe et al 2012). Some of the phenotypes mediated by ascarosides include aggregation, olfactory plasticity, dauer formation, attraction behavior, and hermaphrodite behavior. (Srinivasan et al 2008; Edison, 2009; Ludewig & Schroeder, 2013) Chemically, ascarosides are glycosides of the dideoxy sugar ascarylose, attached to a fatty acid side chain, thus implicating GTs in their biosynthesis. In addition, the innate immune system in C. elegans utilizes a wide range of immune effectors and enzymes (including GTs) for microbial defenses and xenobiotics detoxification (Lindblom & Dodd, 2006; Stupp et al 2012). Stupp et al 2012 showed that C. elegans can detoxify two bacterial toxins, 1-hydroxyphenazine (1-HP), and indole via N- and O-glycosylation. Our research aims to discover the roles of specific GTs in biological processes like these. In this exploratory study, we selected a dozen GT mutant strains, the majority of which belong to the GT-A fold protein (families 2, 7, 21, 27, and 13). 6 replicates of each strains (L1 stage) were cultured to about a population of 100-200 thousand for NMR metabolomics measurements, and animals were randomly selected from each sample for the measurement of population distribution using the large particle flow cytometer COPAS Biosorter. The Biosorter measures the extinction and time of flight of individual nematode which is used as a descriptor of developmental stages. Analysis of metabolic changes of some of the GT mutants and the association with the population distribution will be reported.

    Affiliations:
    - Institute of Bioinformatics, University of Georgia, Athens, GA
    - Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA
    - Complex Carbohydrate Research Center, 315 Riverbend Road, Athens, GA


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