[
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.
[
1994]
Nematodes have been cultured continuously in the laboratory since 1944 when Margaret Briggs Gochnauer isolated and cultured the free-living hermaphroditic species Caenorhabditis briggsae. Work with C. briggsae and other rhabditid nematodes, C. elegans, Rhabditis anomala, and R. pellio, demonstrated the relative ease with which they could be cultured. The culturing techniques described here were developed for C. elegans, but are generally suitable (to varying degrees) for other free-living nematodes. Whereas much of the early work involved axenic culturing, most of these techniques are no longer in common use and are not included here. In the 1970s C. elegans became the predominant research model due to work by Brenner and co-workers on the genetics and development of this species. An adult C. elegans is about 1.5 mm long, and under optimal laboratory conditions has a life cycle of approximately 3 days. There are two sexes, males and self-fertile hermaphrodites, that are readily distinguishable as adults. The animals are transparent throughout the life cycle, permitting observation of cell divisions in living animals using differential interference microscopy. The complete cell lineage and neural circuitry have been determined and a large collection of behavioral and anatomical mutants have been isolated. C. elegans has six developmental stages: egg, four larval stages (L1-L4), and adult. Under starvation conditions or specific manipulations of the culture conditions a developmentally arrested dispersal stage, the dauer larva, can be formed as an alternative third larval stage. Many of the protocols included here and other experimental protocols have been summarized in "The Nematode Caenorhabditis elegans". We also include a previously unpublished method for long-term chemostat cultures of C. elegans. General laboratory culture conditions for nematode parasites of animals have been described, but none of these nematodes can be cultured in the laboratory through more than one life cycle. Marine nematodes and some plant parasites have been cultured xenically or with fungi. Laboratory cultivation of several plant parasites on Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings in agar petri plates has also been reported.