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[
Development,
2021]
Swathi Arur is an Associate Professor for the Department of Genetics at the MD Anderson Cancer Center, USA, where she uses multidisciplinary approaches to understand female germline development and fertility. She has received numerous accolades, including the MD Anderson Distinguished Research Faculty Mentor Award in 2017. In 2020, she was elected to the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Swathi joined the team at Development as an Academic Editor in 2020, and we met with her over Zoom to hear more about her life, her career and her love for <i>C. elegans</i>.
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Dev Cell,
2019]
In this issue of Developmental Cell, Anderson etal. (2019) show that chromatin domain structure on the X chromosome in C.elegans is dispensable for dosage compensation but regulates longevity and thermotolerance. This study sheds light on the mechanisms of domain formation in C.elegans and how these features affect physiology.
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Kirshner A, Eddins D, French R, Helmcke K, Page GP, Linney E, Lnenicka G, Berger K, Welsh-Bohmer KA, Corl AB, Levin ED, Hirsch HV, Aschner M, Bartlett S, Possidente B, Hayden KM, Chen L, Possidente D, Ruden D, Heberlein U
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Neurotoxicology,
2009]
Considerable progress has been made over the past couple of decades concerning the molecular bases of neurobehavioral function and dysfunction. The field of neurobehavioral genetics is becoming mature. Genetic factors contributing to neurologic diseases such as Alzheimer's disease have been found and evidence for genetic factors contributing to other diseases such as schizophrenia and autism are likely. This genetic approach can also benefit the field of behavioral neurotoxicology. It is clear that there is substantial heterogeneity of response with behavioral impairments resulting from neurotoxicants. Many factors contribute to differential sensitivity, but it is likely that genetic variability plays a prominent role. Important discoveries concerning genetics and behavioral neurotoxicity are being made on a broad front from work with invertebrate and piscine mutant models to classic mouse knockout models and human epidemiologic studies of polymorphisms. Discovering genetic factors of susceptibility to neurobehavioral toxicity not only helps identify those at special risk, it also advances our understanding of the mechanisms by which toxicants impair neurobehavioral function in the larger population. This symposium organized by Edward Levin and Annette Kirshner, brought together researchers from the laboratories of Michael Aschner, Douglas Ruden, Ulrike Heberlein, Edward Levin and Kathleen Welsh-Bohmer conducting studies with Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila, fish, rodents and humans studies to determine the role of genetic factors in susceptibility to behavioral impairment from neurotoxic exposure.
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MicroPubl Biol,
2022]
Caenorhabditis elegans is a model species, increasingly used in experimental evolution studies to investigate such major topics as: maintenance of genetic variation, host-pathogen interaction and coevolution, mutations, life history, evolution of reproductive systems, sexual selection (Gray and Cutter, 2014; Teotnio, Estes, Phillips, and Baer, 2017). Its reproductive system in the wild, known as androdioecy, involves mostly self-fertilization of hermaphrodites and occasionally outcrossing with males, which are generally rare (Stewart and Phillips, 2002). This system can be experimentally changed to dioecy, i.e., obligatory outcrossing, through genetic manipulations (see Table I in Anderson, Morran, and Phillips, 2010; Gray and Cutter, 2014).
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[
Genetics,
2016]
The Genetics Society of America's Edward Novitski Prize recognizes an extraordinary level of creativity and intellectual ingenuity in the solution of significant problems in genetics research. The 2016 winner, Leonid Kruglyak, has made innovative contributions to the fields of linkage analysis, population genetics, and genomics, while drawing on a combination of mathematical, computational, and experimental approaches. Among other achievements, his work on statistical standards for genome-wide linkage studies has transformed their experimental design, and the linkage analysis program GENEHUNTER has been used to identify hundreds of human disease loci. Kruglyak's group also pioneered expression quantitative trait locus studies, which enabled variation in global gene expression to shed light on the genetics of complex human diseases. In recent years, his laboratory has focused on using genomic technology to establish Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Caenorhabditis elegans as model organisms for studies of complex genetic variation.
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[
Nematologica,
1969]
Several investigators have reported that nutritional or environmental factors induce morphological variations in the "so-called' bacteriophagous nematodes. For example, Nigon & Dougherty described a morphological mutant of the free-living, self-fertilizing, hermaphroditic nematode Rhabditis (Caenorhabditis) briggsae that ensued following heat-treatment of progeny cultured on bacteria. Also Anderson reported that certain diagnostic features of an Acrobeloides sp., specifically the shape of the labial probolae and tail, varied significantly when the nematodes were grown on bacterial cultures as compared to those grown in soil. The current paper describes a consistent morphological variation in Caenorhabditis briggsae grown axenically on a meridic medium containing a growth factor from a bacterium as compared with nematodes reared on a growth factor from liver extract.
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[
Genetics,
2017]
The Genetics Society of America's Edward Novitski Prize recognizes a single experimental accomplishment or a body of work in which an exceptional level of creativity and intellectual ingenuity has been used to design and execute scientific experiments to solve a difficult problem in genetics. The 2017 winner, Jonathan Hodgkin, used elegant genetic studies to unravel the sex determination pathway in Caenorhabditis elegans He inferred the order of genes in the pathway and their modes of regulation using epistasis analyses-a powerful tool that was quickly adopted by other researchers. He expanded the number and use of informational suppressor mutants in C. elegans that are able to act on many genes. He also introduced the use of collections of wild C. elegans to study naturally occurring genetic variation, paving the way for SNP mapping and QTL analysis, as well as studies of hybrid incompatibilities between worm species. His current work focuses on nematode-bacterial interactions and innate immunity.
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Fundamental and Applied Nematology,
1997]
The effects of structural heterogeneity on both chemical diffusion and nematode movement are examined with the development of a theoretical model. The model considers three factors affecting nematode movement: soil structure, nematode foraging strategy and chemotaxis. Using a continuous model, we develop a discrete system which allows nematode trails to be simulated in any of the four experimental conditions given by Anderson et al (1997). We show that structural heterogeneity causes mixed levels of attractant concentration over small areas as well as "fingering" of the attractant. Soil structural heterogeneity also restricts the foraging strategy of the nematode which then becomes a strategy to avoid structural "traps". The effect of localised increases in structural density is shown to increase significantly "fingering" of the attractant.
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[
Plant Disease Reporter,
1975]
Twenty-five genera of nematodes were identified in six vegetable crops (carrot, pea, broccoli, rutabaga, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower) at fifty-six locations in Prince Edward Island (P.E.I.). Root lesion nematodes, Pratylenchus penetrans, were found in the soil at all locations and accounted for about 19% of the total nematode fauna. Meloidogyne hapla were recovered in only a few samples in low numbers, as were nematodes in the order Dorylaimida which accounted for about 5% of the total population. Non-stylet bearing nematodes made up 55% of the total and most of these were in two genera, Caenorhabditis spp. and Cephalobus spp. Carrot soils harbored the highest number of root lesion nematodes and pea soils had the least; 4726 and 547/kg of dry soil, respectively. Pea roots, however, had 2647/g dry root of these nematodes. No root lesion or other endoparasitic nematodes were recovered from the tap roots of carrots or from rutabagas. Some carrot and pea fields appeared to have lower than average yields where root lesion nematodes were recovered from soil and roots in very high numbers.
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[
Bio Protoc,
2017]
Eukaryotic cells contain various types of cytoplasmic, non-membrane bound ribonucleoprotein (RNP) granules that consist of non-translating mRNAs and a versatile set of associated proteins. One prominent type of RNP granules are Processing bodies (P bodies), which majorly harbors translationally inactive mRNAs and an array of proteins mediating mRNA degradation, translational repression and cellular mRNA transport (Sheth and Parker, 2003). Another type of RNP granules, the stress granules (SGs), majorly contain mRNAs associated with translation initiation factors and are formed upon stress-induced translational stalling (Kedersha et al., 2000 and 1999). Multiple evidence obtained from studies in unicellular organisms supports a model in which P bodies and SGs physically interact during cellular stress to direct mRNAs for transport, decay, temporal storage or reentry into translation (Anderson and Kedersha, 2008; Decker and Parker, 2012). The quantification, distribution and colocalization of P bodies and/or SGs are essential tools to study the composition of RNP granules and their contribution to fundamental cellular processes, such as stress response and translational regulation. In this protocol we describe a method to quantify P bodies and SGs in somatic tissues of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans.