[
Methods Cell Biol,
1995]
This chapter is devoted to providing information on techniques applicable to studying transcription and translation in Caenorhabditis elegans. These techniques are constantly evolving and being passed among workers, each making improvements or adaptations. None of the techniques discussed below are original, but, rather, have emerged from a variety of sources over the years, making it difficult to trace their origin or give credit to the originators. Although each technique has been used successfully, for each there are alternative methods available in the literature that work equally well. In fact, depending on the available resources, you might find that an alternative technique suits your needs and facilities better than the one described below. For this reason, the procedures discussed below are usually accompanied by one or more references that will allow you to look at other, related methods. Where appropriate, there will also be a discussion of factors to consider when
[
2003]
Since the publication of the first genetic research paper on Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans for short) in 1974, this microscopic, free-living nematode has become a popular model organism to study development, neurobiology, and other biological problems. The ability to do powerful genetics has been the most critical reason why studies using this organism have made enormous contributions to basic biology and medical science. Therefore, C. elegans genetics should be part of any modern genetic education. In this chapter, we describe some of the unique properties of C. elegans that makes it an exceptional organism for genetic and molecular biological research. Some important genetic tools and methodologies developed by C. elegans researchers will also be introduced. We aim to connect the fundamental principles of genetics as described in early chapters with practical applications of these principles in actual research. We have chosen a few genetic pathways and biological problems as examples for illustrating the logic behind the genetic analyses and for introducing some commonly practiced strategies and methods. We do not hesitate to introduce some of the most advanced and up-to-date methods and approaches, including those developed since the genome sequence was determined in 1998. We believe today's students can go right into the heart of present research after learning the basic principle of Genetics (see the early chapters of this book) and molecular biology. In fact, in many C. elegans laboratories, undergraduate students are doing a wide variety of experiments using the genetic techniques
[
Methods Cell Biol,
1995]
ACeDB (A Caenorhabditis elegans Data Base) is a data management and display system that contains a wide range of genomic and other information about C. elegans. This chapter provides an overview of ACeDB for the C. elegans user, focusing in particular on the Macintosh version Macace. Previous reviews of AceDB include those of Thierry-Mieg and Durbin (1992) and Durbin and Thierry-Mieg (1994), which describe the general properties of the whole system, and that by Dunham et al. (1994), which discussed the use of AceDB for physical map data collection and assembly. ACeDB was developed by Jean Thierry-Mieg and Richard Durbin primarily for the C. elegans project, when the genomic sequencing project was just beginning in 1990. The original aim was to create a single database that integrated the genetic and physical maps with both genomic sequence data and the literature references. The forerunner of ACeDB was the program CONTIG9 (Sulston et al., 1988), which was developed to maintain and edit the physical map. CONTIG9 served researchers around the world by providing critical on-line access to the current physical map as it was being constructed (Coulson et al., 1986). This policy of immediate access allowed members of the worm community to see the same data as the people making the map, and proved very successful in maximizing use of the map. The same approach was adopted as a template for ACeDB. These two principles, developing a comprehensive database for all types of genomic and related data and providing public access to the data in the same form as used by the data-collecting laboratories, have continued to underlie developments of ACeDB. Over the last 5 years, a wide range of genome projects relating to other organisms have taken the ACeDB program and used it to develop databases for their own data. ACeDB has been used both in public projects designed to redistribute public data in a coordinated fashion and laboratory-based projects for collecting new data. Others, such as the C. elegans ACeDB, have used the database for both purposes. The reason it has been possible to adapt ACeDB so widely is that its flexible data structure allows new types of objects and new types of information about these objects to be added easily. This chapter describes (1) how to obtain ACeDB and documentation for it, (2) how to access and use the information in ACeDB, and (3) how to use ACeDB as a laboratory-based data managing system. Some of what we discuss is specific to the nematode database, but other information applies to the basic computer software program and, hence, to any database using the ACeDB program.