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Resources » Paper

Calahorro F et al. (2021) Toxicol Rep "Impact of drug solvents on C. elegans pharyngeal pumping."

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    PMID:
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    Publication type:
    Journal_article
    WormBase ID:
    WBPaper00061586

    Calahorro F, Holden-Dye L, & O'Connor V (2021). Impact of drug solvents on C. elegans pharyngeal pumping. Toxicol Rep, 8, 1240-1247. doi:10.1016/j.toxrep.2021.06.007

    <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i> provides a multi-cellular model organism for toxicology and drug discovery. These studies usually require solvents such as dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), ethanol or acetone as a vehicle. This raises the need to carefully consider whether the chemical vehicles used in these screens are anodyne towards <i>C. elegans</i>. Here, we use pharyngeal pumping as a bioassay to assess this. Pharyngeal pumping is a visually scoreable behaviour that is controlled by environmental cues activating sensory and integrative neural signalling to coordinate pharyngeal activity. As such it serves as a rich bioassay to screen for chemical modulation. We found that while pumping was insensitive to high concentrations of the widely used drug solvents ethanol and acetone, it was perturbed by concentrations of DMSO above 0.5 % v/v encompassing concentrations used as drug vehicle. This was manifested as an inhibition of pharyngeal pump rate followed by a slow recovery in the continued presence of the solvent. The inhibition was not observed in a neuroligin mutant, <i>nlg-1</i>, consistent with DMSO acting at the level of sensory processing that modulates pumping. We found that <i>bus-17</i> mutants, which have enhanced cuticle penetration to drugs are more sensitive to DMSO. The effect of DMSO is accompanied by a progressive morphological disruption in which internal membrane-like structures of varying size accumulate. These internal structures are seen in all three genotypes investigated in this study and likely arise independent of the effects on pharyngeal pumping. Overall, these results highlight sensory signalling and strain dependent vehicle sensitivity. Although we define concentrations at which this can be mitigated, it highlights the need to consider time-dependent vehicle effects when evaluating control responses in <i>C. elegans</i> chemical biology.


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