Caenorhabditis elegans is a free living soil nematode and thus in its natural habitat, C. elegans encounters many different species of soil bacteria. Although some soil bacteria may be excellent sources of nutrition for the worm, others may be pathogenic. Thus, we undertook a study to understand how C. elegans can identify their preferred food using a simple behavioral assay. We found that there are various species of soil bacteria that C. elegans prefers in comparison to the standard laboratory E. coli strain OP50. In particular, two bacterial strains, Bacillus mycoides and Bacillus soli, were preferred strains. Interestingly, the sole feeding of these bacteria to wild type animals results in extended lifespan through the activation of the autophagic process. Further studies will be required to understand the precise mechanism controlling the behavior of identification and selection of food in C. elegans.
Autophagy and endocytic pathway are highly regulated catabolic processes. Both processes are crucial for cell growth, development, differentiation, disease and homeostasis and exhibit membrane rearrangement for their function. Autophagy and endocytic pathway represent branches of the lysosomal digestive system, autophagy being responsible for degradation of cytoplasmic components and endocytic pathway for degradation of exogenous substances. Here we report that autophagy is activated when endocytic pathway regulatory genes such as rab-5 and rabx-5 are disrupted. Defects in the ubiquitin binding domain of RABX-5 are critical in activating autophagy. We also observed that the elevated autophagy level does not contribute to lifespan extension of rabx-5 mutant. Our results suggest that autophagy may compensate for the endocytic pathway when regulatory genes for the endocytic pathway malfunction, providing a case of complementation between two functionally related cellular processes.
C. elegans coelomocytes are macrophage-like scavenger cells that provide an excellent in vivo system for the study of clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Using this in vivo system, several genes involved in coelomocyte endocytosis have been identified previously. However, the detailed mechanism of endocytic pathway is still unknown. Here, we report a new function of calcineurin, an evolutionarily conserved Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent Ser/Thr protein phosphatase, in coelomocyte endocytosis. We found that calcineurin mutants show defective coelomocyte endocytosis. Genetic analysis suggests that calcineurin and a GTPase, dynamin (DYN-1), may function upstream of an orphan receptor, CUP-4, to regulate endocytosis. Therefore, we propose a model in which calcineurin may regulate coelomocyte endocytosis via DYN-1 and CUP-4 in C. elegans.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.