-
[
International Worm Meeting,
2017]
Behavior is grounded in the interaction between an organism's brain, its body, and its environment. With only 302 neurons and a fully-reconstructed neural and muscle anatomy at the cellular level, C. elegans is an ideal candidate organism to study behavior with the help of computational models. Of particular interest is understanding the neuromechanical basis of locomotion, since nearly its entire behavioral repertoire is expressed through movement. How the rhythmic pattern is generated and propagated along the body is not yet well understood. We report on the development and analysis of a model of forward locomotion that integrates known neuroanatomy, neurophysiology and body mechanics of the worm. Our model is the first to consider recent experimental analysis of the structure of the ventral cord circuitry and the effect of local body curvature on nearby motorneurons. We develop a neuroanatomically-grounded neural model of the ventral nerve cord subcircuit, using a neural model capable of reproducing the full range of electrophysiological properties observed in C. elegans neurons. We integrated the neural model with a reconstruction of a biomechanical model of the worm's body from published descriptions, with updated musculature and stretch receptors. Unknown parameters were evolved using a genetic algorithm to match the speed of the worm on agar. We performed 100 evolutionary runs and consistently found electrophysiological configurations that reproduced realistic control of forward movement. The ensemble of successful solutions reproduced key experimental observations that they were not designed to fit, including the curvature profile of the body's movement, and the wavelength and frequency of the propagating wave. Analysis of the ensemble revealed forward locomotion is possible without intrinsic oscillations in either the head or the rest of the ventral nerve cord. Circuits were capable of initiating oscillations in the head using only stretch reception, providing a novel hypothesis. Similarly, circuits relied on stretch reception to propagate the dorsoventral oscillation, without the need for bistability in the motorneurons, as had been previously proposed, and with gap junctions across neural units playing only a minor role. Altogether, we provide an existence proof for forward locomotion through stretch-reception in an up-to-date neuromechanical model of the worm, as well as a series of testable hypotheses about its operation.
-
[
International Worm Meeting,
2019]
C. elegans locomotes in an undulatory fashion, generating thrust by propagating dorsoventral bends along its body. As in many other organisms, there are likely multiple mechanisms, external and internal, contributing to the generation, propagation, and coordination of rhythmic patterns controlling locomotion in the worm. Experimental and theoretical work in C. elegans has provided support for roles of both stretch-receptor feedback and central pattern generators. Current work leaves a number of major questions unanswered: (1) Can multiple network oscillators coordinate their activity to produce the traveling wave necessary for locomotion in the absence of stretch-receptor feedback? (2) Can stretch-receptor feedback alone drive locomotion? and (3) How can stretch-receptor feedback work together with intrinsic oscillators to modulate movement? In the current work, we integrated a neuroanatomically-grounded model of the ventral nerve cord with a biomechanical model of the worm's body and we used an evolutionary algorithm to determine unknown physiological parameters of each neuron and connection so that the complete system reproduces the kinematics of forward and backward locomotive behavior, as controlled by command interneurons. We performed experiments under three conditions: (a) stretch-receptor feedback was never available during evolution, (b) stretch-receptor feedback was always available, and (c) stretch-receptor feedback was intermittently available. We then analyzed the ensemble of solutions as a way to address the motivating questions and generate novel hypotheses about the neuromechanical basis for locomotion. In all conditions, the model worms reproduce the speed of the worm and are consistent with key kinematic features, such as frequency and wavelength. First, when stretch-receptor feedback information was not available, a chain of central pattern generators, connected through a set of chemical and gap junctions, can drive forward and backward locomotion on agar. Analysis of these solutions reveal three different possible mechanisms for realizing the anterior-posterior coordination of the intrinsic oscillators. Second, when stretch-receptor feedback information was reliably available, the neural controller takes advantage of this information to both generate and propagate the rhythmic pattern without the need for intrinsic oscillations. Finally, model worms evolved with intermittent stretch-receptor feedback utilized mixed pattern generators: a combination of multiple intrinsic oscillators capable of coordination that use sensory feedback to finetune and modulate their motor patterns. Analysis of these results suggests specific mechanisms for how stretch-receptor feedback is used to help coordinate the intrinsic oscillators.
-
[
Biosci Biotechnol Biochem,
2016]
We compared the growth inhibitory effects of all aldohexose stereoisomers against the model animal Caenorhabditis elegans. Among the tested compounds, the rare sugars d-allose (d-All), d-talose (d-Tal), and l-idose (l-Ido) showed considerable growth inhibition under both monoxenic and axenic culture conditions. 6-Deoxy-d-All had no effect on growth, which suggests that C6-phosphorylation by hexokinase is essential for inhibition by d-All.
-
[
Bioorg Med Chem Lett,
2016]
Biological activities of unusual monosaccharides (rare sugars) have largely remained unstudied until recently. We compared the growth inhibitory effects of aldohexose stereoisomers against the animal model Caenorhabditis elegans cultured in monoxenic conditions with Escherichia coli as food. Among these stereoisomers, the rare sugar d-arabinose (d-Ara) showed particularly strong growth inhibition. The IC50 value for d-Ara was estimated to be 7.5mM, which surpassed that of the potent glycolytic inhibitor 2-deoxy-d-glucose (19.5mM) used as a positive control. The inhibitory effect of d-Ara was also observed in animals cultured in axenic conditions using a chemically defined medium; this excluded the possible influence of E. coli. To our knowledge, this is the first report of biological activity of d-Ara. The d-Ara-induced inhibition was recovered by adding either d-ribose or d-fructose, but not d-glucose. These findings suggest that the inhibition could be induced by multiple mechanisms, for example, disturbance of d-ribose and d-fructose metabolism.
-
[
Bioorg Med Chem Lett,
2019]
The biological activities of deoxy sugars (deoxy monosaccharides) have remained largely unstudied until recently. We compared the growth inhibition by all 1-deoxyketohexoses using the animal model Caenorhabditis elegans. Among the eight stereoisomers, 1-deoxy-d-allulose (1d-d-Alu) showed particularly strong growth inhibition. The 50% inhibition of growth (GI<sub>50</sub>) concentration by 1d-d-Alu was estimated to be 5.4mM, which is approximately 10 times lower than that of d-allulose (52.7mM), and even lower than that of the potent glycolytic inhibitor, 2-deoxy-d-glucose (19.5mM), implying that 1d-d-Alu has a strong growth inhibition. In contrast, 5-deoxy- and 6-deoxy-d-allulose showed no growth inhibition of C. elegans. The inhibition by 1d-d-Alu was alleviated by the addition of d-ribose or d-fructose. Our findings suggest that 1d-d-Alu-mediated growth inhibition could be induced by the imbalance in d-ribose metabolism. To our knowledge, this is the first report of biological activity of 1d-d-Alu which may be considered as an antimetabolite drug candidate.
-
[
Biochim Biophys Acta Proteins Proteom,
2020]
d-Aspartate oxidase (DDO) is a flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-containing flavoprotein that stereospecifically acts on acidic D-amino acids (i.e., free d-aspartate and D-glutamate). Mammalian DDO, which exhibits higher activity toward d-aspartate than D-glutamate, is presumed to regulate levels of d-aspartate in the body and is not thought to degrade D-glutamate in vivo. By contrast, three DDO isoforms are present in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, DDO-1, DDO-2, and DDO-3, all of which exhibit substantial activity toward D-glutamate as well as d-aspartate. In this study, we optimized the Escherichia coli culture conditions for production of recombinant C. elegans DDO-1, purified the protein, and showed that it is a flavoprotein with a noncovalently but tightly attached FAD. Furthermore, C. elegans DDO-1, but not mammalian (rat) DDO, efficiently and selectively degraded D-glutamate in addition to d-aspartate, even in the presence of various other amino acids. Thus, C. elegans DDO-1 might be a useful tool for determining these acidic D-amino acids in biological samples.
-
[
J Appl Glycosci (1999),
2019]
D-Allose (D-All), C-3 epimer of D-glucose, is a rare sugar known to suppress reactive oxygen species generation and prevent hypertension. We previously reported that D-allulose, a structural isomer of D-All, prolongs the lifespan of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Thus, D-All was predicted to affect longevity. In this study, we provide the first empirical evidence that D-All extends the lifespan of C. elegans. Lifespan assays revealed that a lifespan extension was induced by 28 mM D-All. In particular, a lifespan extension of 23.8 % was achieved (p< 0.0001). We further revealed that the effects of D-All on lifespan were dependent on the insulin gene
daf-16 and the longevity gene
sir-2.1, indicating a distinct mechanism from those of other hexoses, such as D-allulose, with previously reported antiaging effects.
-
[
J Nat Med,
2008]
No anthelmintic sugars have yet been identified. Eight ketohexose stereoisomers (D- and L-forms of psicose, fructose, tagatose and sorbose), along with D-galactose and D-glucose, were examined for potency against L1 stage Caenorhabditis elegans fed Escherichia coli. Of the sugars, D-psicose specifically inhibited the motility, growth and reproductive maturity of the L1 stage. D-Psicose probably interferes with the nematode nutrition. The present results suggest that D-psicose, one of the rare sugars, is a potential anthelmintic.
-
Yousuke Seida, Kazuhiro Maeda, Tomonori Kawata, Masumi Katane, Hiroyuki Kobuna, Takao Inoue, Yasuaki Saitoh, Hiroyuki Arai, Yasuhito Nakagawa, Masae Sekine, Taro Sakamoto, Hiroshi Homma, Takemitsu Furuchi
[
East Asia Worm Meeting,
2010]
Among free D-amino acids existing in living organisms, D-serine (D-Ser) and D-aspartate (D-Asp) are the most actively studied. D-Ser has been proposed as a neuromodulator that regulates L-glutamate-mediated activation of the N-methyl-D-Asp (NMDA) receptor by acting as a co-agonist. On the other hand, several lines of evidence suggest that D-Asp plays important roles in regulating developmental processes, hormone secretion and steroidogenesis. D-Amino acid oxidase (DAO) and D-Asp oxidase (DDO) are known as stereospecific degradative enzymes that catalyze the oxidative deamination of D-amino acids. DAO displays broad substrate specificity and acts on several neutral and basic D-amino acids, while DDO is highly specific for acidic D-amino acids. DAO and DDO are presumed to regulate endogenous D-Ser and D-Asp levels, respectively, as well as mediate the elimination of accumulated exogenous D-amino acids in various organs. Previously, we demonstrated that nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, a multicellular model animal has at least one active DAO gene and three active DDO genes, while it had been thought that most organisms bear only one copy of each DAO and DDO gene. In addition, our previous study revealed that the spatiotemporal distributions of these enzymes in the body of C. elegans are different from one another. In this study, to elucidate the physiological roles of the C. elegans DAO and DDOs, we characterized several phenotypes of four C. elegans mutants in which each gene is partially deleted and inactivated. We also determined free D-amino acid contents in several worm samples using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) techniques. We will report the phenotypes of the C. elegans mutants in comparison with those of wild-type C. elegans, as well as alterations in D-amino acid levels within the body.
-
Inoue, Takao, Sekine, Masae, Saitoh, Yasuaki, Arai, Hiroyuki, Furuchi, Takemitsu, Sakamoto, Taro, Okutsu, Mari, Homma, Hiroshi, Katane, Masumi
[
International Worm Meeting,
2013]
Among free D-amino acids existing in living organisms, D-serine (D-Ser) and D-aspartate (D-Asp) are the most intensively studied. In mammals, D-Ser has been proposed as a neuromodulator that regulates L-glutamate (L-Glu)-mediated activation of the N-methyl-D-Asp (NMDA) receptor by acting as a co-agonist. On the other hand, several lines of evidence suggest that D-Asp plays important roles in regulating hormone secretion and steroidogenesis. D-Amino acid oxidase (DAO) and D-Asp oxidase (DDO) are known as stereospecific degradative enzymes that catalyze the oxidative deamination of D-amino acids. Mammalian DAO and DDO are presumed to regulate endogenous D-Ser and D-Asp levels, respectively. Previously, we demonstrated that D-Ser, D-Asp, D-Glu and D-alanine (D-Ala) are present in nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, a multicellular model animal. We also found that C. elegans has at least one active DAO gene and three active DDO genes (DDO-1, DDO-2 and DDO-3), and that the spatiotemporal distributions of these enzymes in the body of C. elegans differ from one another. Furthermore, our previous study showed that alterations of brood size and hatching rate are observed in four C. elegans mutants lacking each gene for the DAO and DDOs. Interestingly, lifespan extension was observed in the DDO-3 mutant. To characterize the mechanism of lifespan extension in the DDO-3 mutant, we performed genetic epistasis experiments to test interactions between the DDO-3 gene and other known longevity pathways. The results suggest that DDO-3 is involved in caloric restriction-induced lifespan extension but not in insulin/IGF signaling pathway, NAD/sir2 pathway nor mitochondrial electron transport system. We also found that D-Glu and L-tryptophan (L-Trp) accumulate throughout life in the DDO-3 mutant. Now we are investigating the relationship between aging and the accumulations of D-Glu and L-Trp.