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[
International Worm Meeting,
2015]
We study the natural coevolution between Caenorhabditis briggsae and its two recently described RNA viruses called Santeuil and Le Blanc (1, 2). The main advantage of this system is to combine the access to wild host and virus populations with powerful molecular tools and experimental evolution designs. We characterized the incidence of the two C. briggsae viruses in France and found that they are found in sympatry. By monitoring the viral RNAs in wild-caught C. briggsae isolates using Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization, we demonstrated that the Le Blanc and Santeuil viruses could coexist in one host population, one animal and one intestinal cell. Molecular variation of the wild-caught viruses was assessed by sequencing their two RNA molecules. While both viruses' diversities are geographically structured, we detected balancing selection on the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) locus in one local Santeuil population. Despite the frequent incidence of coinfection in the wild, we found no evidence for genetic exchange (recombination or RNA reassortment) between the Santeuil and Le Blanc viruses. However, we found clear evidence for RNA reassortment between different Santeuil virus variants. Finally, we investigated natural variation in C. briggsae resistance to each virus. We tested a set of wild isolates -representative of C. briggsae worldwide diversity- for their sensitivity to the Santeuil and Le Blanc viruses. While temperate C. briggsae genotypes are generally susceptible to both viruses, the tested tropical C. briggsae genotypes are resistant to both viruses. Most interestingly, two Japanese C. briggsae genotypes show specific resistance to the Le Blanc virus. To understand the genetic basis of the general and virus-specific resistances of C. briggsae, we carried out a QTL-mapping approach using recombinant inbred lines between AF16 and HK104 (3) and identified a main QTL region on chromosome IV responsible for the variation in resistance to Santeuil virus infection.(1) Felix, Ashe, Piffaretti et al. 2011 PloS Biology. (2) Franz et al. 2012 Journal of Virology. (3) Ross et al. 2011 PLoS Genetics..
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[
West Coast Worm Meeting,
2004]
In C. elegans epidermal intermediate filaments (IFs) and their associated structures, the trans-epidermal attachments, are essential for embryonic epidermal elongation (Woo et al 2004). The formation of muscle contractile units and trans-epidermal attachments are mutually dependent during epidermal elongation. To understand how the connection between epidermis and muscle is established and how the two tissues communicate during organogenesis, we performed a screen for epidermal elongation-defective mutants. One locus identified in this screen was defined by three lethal alleles and mapped to the cluster of LG II. Subsequent analysis showed that these mutations were allelic to
vab-13 and
ven-3 . By genetic mapping and allele sequencing we showed that all these mutations affect F10E7.4, which encodes the C. elegans member of the F-spondin family of secreted proteins. F-spondin has been shown to play roles in axon guidance, cell migration, and angiogenesis. Our genetic analysis shows that in C. elegans F-spondin is required for epidermal elongation and muscle attachment, as well as for proper positioning of neuronal processes. Using GFP reporters, we found that F-spondin is expressed in body muscle cells and is a secreted protein. Thus, F-spondin may function in embryogenesis in communication between muscle and epidermis. Immunostaining of F-spondin mutants suggest that F-spondin may indirectly affect the organization of epidermal actin microfilaments and trans-epidermal attachments . We are examining the expression patterns of muscle and basement membrane components in F-spondin mutants. To study the signaling pathways regulated by F-spondin, we are testing mutations in candidate receptor genes for genetic interactions with F-spondin mutations.
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[
C.elegans Neuronal Development Meeting,
2008]
Release of neurotransmitters from neurons is highly regulated. Several proteins play roles in this process, including UNC-13, and decreased release of neurotransmitters in
unc-13 mutants results in paralysis. We identified an F-box protein that interacts with UNC-13. F-box proteins participate in ubiquitin ligase complexes and in Drosophila, DUNC-13 is degraded via the ubiquitin proteasome pathway. This UNC-13/F-box interaction may therefore indicate that UNC-13 is tagged for proteasomal degradation with ubiquitin by the ligase complex in C. elegans. The C. elegans knockout consortium isolated a strain with a large deletion in the coding region of the gene that codes for the F-box protein. If the F-box protein is indeed involved in the degradation of UNC-13, this strain would be expected to have higher levels of UNC-13, which could result in changes in phenotypes. We characterized the F-box deletion mutant by assaying brood size, developmental rate, and body bends per minute. Aldicarb assays were used to determine whether a deletion in the gene coding for the F-box protein alters the response to inhibitors of acetylcholinesterase. We found that the deletion resulted in some changes in developmental rate and in aldicarb sensitivity. We are continuing to study strains with mutations in both the gene coding for the F-box protein and in
unc-13.
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[
International Worm Meeting,
2017]
The discovery of RNA viruses that naturally infect C. elegans and C. briggsae serves as an ideal model system to study antiviral immunity and host-pathogen co-evolution. The Orsay virus only infects C. elegans whereas Santeuil and Le Blanc viruses only infect C. briggsae. Intraspecifically, within both species we found a wide variation in viral sensitivity, as well as a positive correlation among wild isolates in sensitivity to both viruses in C. briggsae. An exception to this correlation is the C. briggsae strain HK104, which is specifically resistant to Le Blanc virus but sensitive to Santeuil virus. Taking advantage of this natural variation in the host, we use a genetic approach from the host side and use Recombinant Inbred Lines (RILs) to first map the recombinant genomic regions participating to the resistance/sensitivity in a general and/or specific manner. The RILs were phenotyped for the sensitivity to the relevant viruses using Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization (FISH). The genotype (SNP markers from pool sequencing) and phenotype (resistance/sensitivity from FISH) data were used to perform QTL analysis. Several Near Isogenic Lines (NILs) were created by introgressing the candidate regions. C. briggsae AF16 is resistant to both Santeuil and Le Blanc viruses while C. briggsae HK104 is specifically sensitive to the Santeuil virus. Using AF16xHK104 Advanced Intercrossed RILs (AIRILs) (Ross et al. 2011), two QTLs were detected on chromosomes III and IV for Santeuil virus sensitivity. The NILs in the AF16 background confirm both candidate regions. C. briggsae JU1498 is sensitive to both Santeuil and Le Blanc viruses. Using JU1498xHK104 RILs, a QTL on chromosome II was detected and is being introgressed. Once candidate polymorphisms associated with the virus sensitivity/resistance are identified, we will test them by RNAi knockdown, transformation rescue and/or CRISPR-mediated gene replacement.
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[
International Worm Meeting,
2013]
Species involved in host-pathogen relationships exert selective pressures on each other. This co-evolution situation results in an arms race between host and pathogen, which may lead to specialisation of their interactions.
We recently found three related horizontally-transmitted RNA viruses that naturally infect C. elegans or C. briggsae, called Orsay, Santeuil and Le Blanc viruses (Felix et al. 2011, Franz et al. 2012). Here we study their specificity for C. elegans vs. C. briggsae, and at the intraspecific level in C. briggsae.
We first used viral filtrates to infect a set of C. elegans and C. briggsae isolates, and measured by RT-PCR the virus ability to replicate. We find that the Orsay virus can infect C. elegans but not C. briggsae, whereas Santeuil and Le Blanc viruses infect C. briggsae, but not C. elegans. Thus, each virus shows specificity toward one of these two Caenorhabditis species.
Given that C. briggsae can be infected by two viruses, we then measured viral replication after infection of C. briggsae isolates by either Santeuil or Le Blanc viruses, using RT-qPCR. We observed 1) wide variation among C. briggsae isolates; 2) correlation between the sensitivities to each virus; 3) an exception to the correlation. Schematically, C. briggsae isolates can be separated into two groups: sensitive isolates, in which the viruses replicate efficiently; and resistant ones, in which the viruses either disappear or are barely maintained. Strikingly, all sensitive strains belong to the temperate C. briggsae clade, raising the possibility that sensitivity is derived within this clade. The exception to the correlation in sensitivity is HK104, a temperate-clade isolate from Japan. HK104 is sensitive to the Santeuil virus, but resistant to Le Blanc. This result opens the possibility to study specificity of host-pathogen interactions through genetic analysis.
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[
International Worm Meeting,
2013]
We recently found three viruses, Orsay, Santeuil and Le Blanc, which naturally infect Caenorhabditis nematodes (1,2). These ss(+)RNA viruses cause intestinal cell symptoms and are horizontally transmitted. Whereas C. elegans can so far only be infected by the Orsay virus, European C. briggsae genotypes are susceptible to both Santeuil and Le Blanc viruses, and both viruses have been found in the same locations. This vulnerability of C. briggsae to two viruses enables studies of in vivo viral competition and of the mechanisms driving their short-term evolution, as well as the impact of their competition on worm fitness.
RNA viruses may evolve rapidly through both high mutation rates and recombination events. The impact of recombination widely varies from one viral species to another but in all cases, for recombination to occur, different virus types have to infect the same host cell. The first step is thus to assess whether different virus species can co-infect the same worm population, the same animal and the same cell.
By using quantitative RT-PCR, we demonstrate that the Le Blanc and Santeuil viruses can coexist in a worm population, even when originally introduced at widely different concentrations. The two viruses are jointly maintained over 10 worm generations. We presently investigate the co-infection at the whole organism and single cell levels by tracking the viral RNAs in co-infected worms using Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization.
1- Felix, Ashe, Piffaretti et al. 2011 PloS biology.
2- Franz et al. 2012 Journal of virology.
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[
International Worm Meeting,
2005]
Actin has been shown to play key roles during early development in the C. elegans embryo (Schneider and Bowerman, 2003). However, it has been difficult to faithfully reproduce F-actin dynamics in vivo during early embryogenesis. To visualize F-actin we have generated a transgenic line that uses the F-actin binding domain of Drosophila moesin to decorate endogenous actin filaments with GFP (GFP::Moe). The GFP::Moe fusion line appears to be specific for filamentous actin and allows the visualization of F-actin dynamics in C. elegans in embryos. Preliminary evidence shows that F-actin is very dynamic in many cellular processes from prior to fertilization through the first mitotic cellular division. During fertilization a posterior actin cap forms and then dissipates. Prior to the first cell division F-actin becomes enriched in the anterior, similar to the anterior PAR proteins. As seen in
par-3 mutants (Kirby et. al., 1990), depleting the embryo of PAR-6 with RNAi prevents this enrichment, suggesting that PAR-6 and the other anterior PARs may be required for F-actin to accumulate in the anterior. We have also observed the presence of highly dynamic actin comets in the early embryo. Preliminary evidence suggests that these comets may be involved with endocytic processes. Using results from large-scale RNAi surveys, we are employing the GFP::Moe line to perform secondary screening of genes associated with pseudocleavage defects to further characterize this process. We will present our progress in using this GFP::Moe line to study genetic interactions involving actin dynamics in early development.
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[
International C. elegans Meeting,
2001]
The ubiuquitin-proteasome pathway is a key mechanism for substrate-specific degradation to control the abundance of a number of proteins. SCF complex, one of ubiquitin-protein ligases (E3s), regulates cell cycle progression, signal transduction, and many other biological systems. The SCF complex consists of invariable components, such as Skp1, Cul-1 and Rbx1, and variable components called F-box proteins that bind to Skp1 through the F-box motif. F-box proteins are substrate-specific adaptor subunits that recruit substrates to the SCF complex. Surprisingly, we found that the genome of Caenorhabditis elegans ( C. elegans ) contains at least 20 Skp1-like sequenses, whereas one or a few Skp1 is present in humans. Therefore, we studied C. elegans Skp1-like proteins (CeSkp1) that are likely to be variable components of SCF complex in addition to F-box proteins. At least, seven CeSkp1s were associated with C. elegans Cul-1 (CeCul-1) in yeast two-hybrid system as well as co-immunoprecipitation assay in mammalian cells, and these expression patterns were different in C. elegans . By RNA interference (RNAi), two of these CeSkp1s showed embyonic lethality and four showed the phenotype of slow growth. There were differences among CeSkp1s in ability to interact with F-box proteins. These results suggest that CeSkp1s, like F-box proteins, act as variable components of SCF complex in C. elegans .
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[
C. elegans: Development and Gene Expression, EMBL, Heidelberg, Germany,
2010]
Morphogenesis requires dynamic interaction between the adherens junctions and the actin cytoskeleton. This interaction is mediated by ?-catenin, which was proposed to be a stable bridge between the junctions and F-actin at the apical regions of polarized epithelial cells. However, ?-catenin cannot bind to F-actin and its adherens junction partner, ?-catenin, simultaneously, suggesting the bridge is dynamic and complex. ?-catenin was thought to inhibit Arp2/3-based branched actin at the junctions for normal maturation of adherens junctions. Our research suggests a new positive role for Arp2/3-dependent branched actin in junctional maturation and during embryonic cell movements of C. elegans . In this study we investigate how progressive WAVE/Scar and Arp2/3-depen dent accumulation of ?-catenin at the adherens junctions contributes to the accumulation of F-actin at apical regions of epithelial cells. We find that removing Arp2/3-dependent actin nucleation disrupts junctional maturation and results in altered levels of adherens junctional proteins in epithelial tissues. In particular, there is a drop in both ?-catenin and F-actin levels at the apical intestine, and altered organization of the apical intestine. Subcellular fractionation reveals that loss of Arp2/3-dependent actin nucleation reduces the amount of ?-catenin in the membrane-associated pool. These data demonstrate an essential role for Arp2/3 to dynamically remodel F-actin to support adherens junctions and polarized F-actin during cell migration and tissue morphogenesis.
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[
Mid-west Worm Meeting,
2004]
P-granules are complexes of proteins and RNA found surrounding the nuclei of C. elegans germ cells and germ cell precursors. GLH (germline RNA helicase) proteins are components of the germline specific P-granules, which are necessary for fertility in C. elegans . PAN-1, a P-granule associated novel protein, was identified as a GLH-binding protein in yeast two hybrid assays. PAN-1 contains some conserved amino acids of N-terminal F-box motifs, as well as sixteen leucine-rich repeats and a weak FOG-2 homology (FTH) motif, each found in F-box proteins. F-box proteins, in the SCF (SKP-1, Cullin, F-box) complex, utilize ubiquitin-mediated substrate degradation. When
pan-1 is eliminated by RNA interference (RNAi), the larvae arrest between the L1 and L2 stages and can survive eight days at 20 0 C. A
pan-1(
gk142) deletion strain exhibits the same 'forever-young' phenotype. mRNA analysis and protein expression show that PAN-1 is not germline specific but is germline enhanced. Experiments are ongoing to separate potential germline and somatic functions of PAN-1. If PAN-1 belongs to the family of F-box proteins, it may be implicated in regulating GLH protein levels, as are two other GLH binding proteins, CSN-5 and KGB-1.