15 research outputs found

    Chemosensation of Bacterial Secondary Metabolites Modulates Neuroendocrine Signaling and Behavior of C.Ā elegans

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    Discrimination between pathogenic and beneficial microbes is essential for host organism immunity and homeostasis. Here, we show that chemosensory detection of two secondary metabolites produced by Pseudomonas aeruginosa modulates a neuroendocrine signaling pathway that promotes avoidance behavior in the simple animal host Caenorhabditis elegans. Secondary metabolites phenazine-1-carboxamide and pyochelin activate a G-protein-signaling pathway in the ASJ chemosensory neuron pair that induces expression of the neuromodulator DAF-7/TGF-Ī². DAF-7, in turn, activates a canonical TGF-Ī² signaling pathway in adjacent interneurons to modulate aerotaxis behavior and promote avoidance of pathogenic P. aeruginosa. Our data provide a chemical, genetic, and neuronal basis for how the behavior and physiology of a simple animal host can be modified by the microbial environment and suggest that secondary metabolites produced by microbes may provide environmental cues that contribute to pathogen recognition and host survival.National Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research Fellowship ProgramEllison Medical Foundation (New Scholar Award

    Metabolomic ā€œDark Matterā€ Dependent on Peroxisomal Ī²-Oxidation in Caenorhabditis elegans

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    Peroxisomal Ī²-oxidation (pĪ²o) is a highly conserved fat metabolism pathway involved in the biosynthesis of diverse signaling molecules in animals and plants. In Caenorhabditis elegans, pĪ²o is required for the biosynthesis of the ascarosides, signaling molecules that control development, lifespan, and behavior in this model organism. Via comparative mass spectrometric analysis of pĪ²o mutants and wildtype, we show that pĪ²o in C. elegans and the satellite model P. pacificus contributes to life stage-specific biosynthesis of several hundred previously unknown metabolites. The pĪ²o-dependent portion of the metabolome is unexpectedly diverse, e.g., intersecting with nucleoside and neurotransmitter metabolism. Cell type-specific restoration of pĪ²o in pĪ²o-defective mutants further revealed that pĪ²o-dependent submetabolomes differ between tissues. These results suggest that interactions of fat, nucleoside, and other primary metabolism pathways can generate structural diversity reminiscent of that arising from combinatorial strategies in microbial natural product biosynthesis

    Biosynthesis of Modular Ascarosides in C. elegans

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    The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans uses simple building blocks from primary metabolism and a strategy of modular assembly to build a great diversity of signaling molecules, the ascarosides, which function as a chemical language in this model organism. In the ascarosides, the dideoxysugar ascarylose serves as a scaffold to which diverse moieties from lipid, amino acid, neurotransmitter, and nucleoside metabolism are attached. However, the mechanisms that underlie the highly specific assembly of ascarosides are not understood. We show that the acyl-CoA synthetase ACS-7, which localizes to lysosome-related organelles, is specifically required for the attachment of different building blocks to the 4ā€²-position of ascr#9. We further show that mutants lacking lysosome-related organelles are defective in the production of all 4ā€²-modified ascarosides, thus identifying the waste disposal system of the cell as a hotspot for ascaroside biosynthesis

    Metabolomic ā€œDark Matterā€ Dependent on Peroxisomal Ī²-Oxidation in Caenorhabditis elegans

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    Peroxisomal Ī²-oxidation (pĪ²o) is a highly conserved fat metabolism pathway involved in the biosynthesis of diverse signaling molecules in animals and plants. In Caenorhabditis elegans, pĪ²o is required for the biosynthesis of the ascarosides, signaling molecules that control development, lifespan, and behavior in this model organism. Via comparative mass spectrometric analysis of pĪ²o mutants and wildtype, we show that pĪ²o in C. elegans and the satellite model P. pacificus contributes to life stage-specific biosynthesis of several hundred previously unknown metabolites. The pĪ²o-dependent portion of the metabolome is unexpectedly diverse, e.g., intersecting with nucleoside and neurotransmitter metabolism. Cell type-specific restoration of pĪ²o in pĪ²o-defective mutants further revealed that pĪ²o-dependent submetabolomes differ between tissues. These results suggest that interactions of fat, nucleoside, and other primary metabolism pathways can generate structural diversity reminiscent of that arising from combinatorial strategies in microbial natural product biosynthesis

    Biology and genome of a newly discovered sibling species of Caenorhabditis elegans

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    A ā€˜siblingā€™ species of the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans has long been sought for use in comparative analyses that would enable deep evolutionary interpretations of biological phenomena. Here, we describe the first sibling species of C. elegans, C. inopinata n. sp., isolated from fig syconia in Okinawa, Japan. We investigate the morphology, developmental processes and behaviour of C. inopinata, which differ significantly from those of C. elegans. The 123-Mb C. inopinata genome was sequenced and assembled into six nuclear chromosomes, allowing delineation of Caenorhabditis genome evolution and revealing unique characteristics, such as highly expanded transposable elements that might have contributed to the genome evolution of C. inopinata. In addition, C. inopinata exhibits massive gene losses in chemoreceptor gene families, which could be correlated with its limited habitat area. We have developed genetic and molecular techniques for C. inopinata; thus C. inopinata provides an exciting new platform for comparative evolutionary studies

    IDENTIFICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF SIGNALING MOLECULES IN NEMATODES AND BACTERIA USING LC-MS-BASED COMPARATIVE METABOLOMICS

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    Chemical communication forms an integral part of any organismā€™s overall health, longevity, social interactions and various other aspects of its biology. Chemical cues produced by different organisms are products of primary and secondary metabolism, and are highly specific in their structural assembly and signaling functions. Minute differences in structures and functions of these metabolites can, for example, help an organism distinguish between pathogenic and beneficial microbes, cause the organism to extend or reduce its lifespan, signal availability or lack of sustenance, and provide snapshots of its metabolic state. As such, it is crucial to annotate structures and functions of the underlying chemical causes behind biological effects, understand how subtle structural differences cause dramatic changes in observed phenotypes, and elucidate their biosynthetic mechanisms to learn how biological information is encoded in these signaling molecules. Ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC-MS/MS) is rapidly becoming an indispensable tool in the study of signaling molecules using comparative metabolomics. This technique far outdoes classical activity-guided fractionation methods to identify chemical cues in biological systems in terms of required time, ease of use and sensitivity. The use of both activity-guided fractionation and UHPLC-MS/MS techniques to elucidate structures of signaling molecules involved in host-pathogen interactions between nematodes and bacteria, and mitochondrion-mediated longevity in nematode are discussed in this dissertation. Forward genetic approaches to identify biosynthetic enzymes responsible for the highly specific assembly of nematode-derived modular metabolites, and validation of their biosynthetic functions are also described. Finally, an untargeted metabolomics approach combining high resolution UHPLC-MS/MS data with genome-wide association studies to annotate the nematode metabolome and identify candidate biosynthetic genes for various metabolites is evaluated

    Intestinal peroxisomal fatty acid Ī²-oxidation regulates neural serotonin signaling through a feedback mechanism.

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    The ability to coordinate behavioral responses with metabolic status is fundamental to the maintenance of energy homeostasis. In numerous species including Caenorhabditis elegans and mammals, neural serotonin signaling regulates a range of food-related behaviors. However, the mechanisms that integrate metabolic information with serotonergic circuits are poorly characterized. Here, we identify metabolic, molecular, and cellular components of a circuit that links peripheral metabolic state to serotonin-regulated behaviors in C. elegans. We find that blocking the entry of fatty acyl coenzyme As (CoAs) into peroxisomal Ī²-oxidation in the intestine blunts the effects of neural serotonin signaling on feeding and egg-laying behaviors. Comparative genomics and metabolomics revealed that interfering with intestinal peroxisomal Ī²-oxidation results in a modest global transcriptional change but significant changes to the metabolome, including a large number of changes in ascaroside and phospholipid species, some of which affect feeding behavior. We also identify body cavity neurons and an ether-a-go-go (EAG)-related potassium channel that functions in these neurons as key cellular components of the circuitry linking peripheral metabolic signals to regulation of neural serotonin signaling. These data raise the possibility that the effects of serotonin on satiety may have their origins in feedback, homeostatic metabolic responses from the periphery

    Intestinal peroxisomal fatty acid Ī²-oxidation regulates neural serotonin signaling through a feedback mechanism.

    No full text
    The ability to coordinate behavioral responses with metabolic status is fundamental to the maintenance of energy homeostasis. In numerous species including Caenorhabditis elegans and mammals, neural serotonin signaling regulates a range of food-related behaviors. However, the mechanisms that integrate metabolic information with serotonergic circuits are poorly characterized. Here, we identify metabolic, molecular, and cellular components of a circuit that links peripheral metabolic state to serotonin-regulated behaviors in C. elegans. We find that blocking the entry of fatty acyl coenzyme As (CoAs) into peroxisomal Ī²-oxidation in the intestine blunts the effects of neural serotonin signaling on feeding and egg-laying behaviors. Comparative genomics and metabolomics revealed that interfering with intestinal peroxisomal Ī²-oxidation results in a modest global transcriptional change but significant changes to the metabolome, including a large number of changes in ascaroside and phospholipid species, some of which affect feeding behavior. We also identify body cavity neurons and an ether-a-go-go (EAG)-related potassium channel that functions in these neurons as key cellular components of the circuitry linking peripheral metabolic signals to regulation of neural serotonin signaling. These data raise the possibility that the effects of serotonin on satiety may have their origins in feedback, homeostatic metabolic responses from the periphery

    Metabolomic ā€œDark Matterā€ Dependent on Peroxisomal Ī²ā€‘Oxidation in <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i>

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    Peroxisomal Ī²-oxidation (pĪ²o) is a highly conserved fat metabolism pathway involved in the biosynthesis of diverse signaling molecules in animals and plants. In <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i>, pĪ²o is required for the biosynthesis of the ascarosides, signaling molecules that control development, lifespan, and behavior in this model organism. Via comparative mass spectrometric analysis of pĪ²o mutants and wildtype, we show that pĪ²o in <i>C.Ā elegans</i> and the satellite model <i>P.Ā pacificus</i> contributes to life stage-specific biosynthesis of several hundred previously unknown metabolites. The pĪ²o-dependent portion of the metabolome is unexpectedly diverse, e.g., intersecting with nucleoside and neurotransmitter metabolism. Cell type-specific restoration of pĪ²o in pĪ²o-defective mutants further revealed that pĪ²o-dependent submetabolomes differ between tissues. These results suggest that interactions of fat, nucleoside, and other primary metabolism pathways can generate structural diversity reminiscent of that arising from combinatorial strategies in microbial natural product biosynthesis
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