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Worm Breeder's Gazette,
1980]
If you are peacefully picking worms one day and an eight-legged hairy monster walks into the field of your dissecting microscope, after you come down from the ceiling, you will know that you too have a mite infestation. You will also know the plot for a grade B horror flick. A piece of the moth crystals used in closets (paradichlorobenzene) placed in your incubator for a few weeks will kill them off with no detectable harm to worm stocks.
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Cancer Research,
1999]
It is an honor and a great pleasure to introduce Dr. Robert Horvitz to you as the 1998 recipient of the Alfred Sloan Prize of the General Motors Cancer Research Foundation. Let me begin by telling you a little bit about Bob's
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Science,
2002]
How much you eat, not what you eat, seems to make a difference in the aging process. It is well established that reduced calorie consumption robustly extends adult life expectancy in a variety of animal models. Now, on page 120 of this issue, Larsen and Clarke show that diet quality also affects aging. In the worm Caenorhabditis elegans, reduced consumption of coenzyme Q (Q) dramatically extends longevity.
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WormBook,
2005]
Mutations in many genes can result in a similar phenotype. Finding a number of mutants with the same phenotype tells you little about how many genes you are dealing with, and how mutable those genes are until you can assign those mutations to genetic loci. The genetic assay for gene assignment is called the complementation test. The simplicity and robustness of this test makes it a fundamental genetic tool for gene assignment. However, there are occasional unexpected outcomes from this test that bear explanation. This chapter reviews the complementation test and its various outcomes, highlighting relatively rare but nonetheless interesting exceptions such as intragenic complementation and non-allelic non-complementation.
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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.
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[
Worm Breeder's Gazette,
1989]
The map is now widely distributed electronically (see WBG 10(3), 67), but we are once again providing a summary for the gazette in the form of an output from the routine CHPLT. Do note that this is a provisional best guess, and that some linkages may later go away: please enquire if you need to know about the status of particular areas. When you receive cosmid clones, as stabs, please IMMEDIATELY streak them out on selective medium, pick small colonies, and grow 4ml minipreps (protocol from Alan Coulson if needed). For some cosmids, larger preps are liable to yield deleted DNA. Check that cosmid DNA appears full size (runs slower than lambda on agarose gels), then freeze a sample of good cells in 20% glycerol at -70 C. MRC computer account 'ARC' does not exist; Alan and John share account JES. A database node is now open at Seattle: modem number 206-467-2957; operator Phil Meneely. The summary of clone types given on the next page may be helpful when you are deciding which clones to request for your research. To reveal the most suitable clones for microinjection, the buried clones need to be displayed by the routine CONTASS; we will help you to do this if you ask. [See Figures 1- 3]
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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.
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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.
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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.
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[
International Worm Meeting,
2007]
Imagine being able to run WormBase on your own computer, unencumbered from server load at www.wormbase.org, network traffic, or even the need for a network connection. Run BLAST searches on your laptop enroute to your next presentation or explore expression patterns of your favorite gene family at the corner coffee shop. Maybe you have a private dataset that you would like to incorporate with WormBase to share within your lab or organization. Or perhaps you would like to set up a mirror site of WormBase as a community resource. All of these scenarios are easily possible with WormBase packages called "virtual machines". Virtual machines contain the entirety of WormBase and an operating system to hold everything together. In essence, this WormBase-customized operating system runs safely inside your Mac (Intel), Windows, or Linux computer using free software from VMWare. Virtual machines are now created for every WormBase release. Learn more about how to use these on the WormBase Wiki:
http://www.wormbase.org/wiki/index.php/Virtual_Machines Bring your laptop by this poster and we will install the most recent version of WormBase for you!