Search results for "Caenorhabditis Elegans"

showing 10 items of 89 documents

S. Typhimurium virulence changes caused by exposure to different non-thermal preservation treatments using C. elegans

2017

The aims of this research study were: (i) to postulate Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) as a useful organism to describe infection by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium), and (ii) to evaluate changes in virulence of S. Typhimurium when subjected repetitively to different antimicrobial treatments. Specifically, cauliflower by-product infusion, High Hydrostatic Pressure (HHP), and Pulsed Electric Fields (PEF). This study was carried out by feeding C. elegans with different microbial populations: E. coli OP50 (optimal conditions), untreated S. Typhimurium, S. Typhimurium treated once and three times with cauliflower by-product infusion, S. Typhimurium treated once and f…

Salmonella typhimurium0301 basic medicineSerotype030106 microbiologyHydrostatic pressureVirulenceBrassicaMicrobiologyMicrobiologyFoodborne Diseases03 medical and health sciences0404 agricultural biotechnologyPulsed Electric FieldsEscherichia coliHydrostatic PressureAnimalsCaenorhabditis elegansCaenorhabditis elegansVirulencebiologyBayes Theorem04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationAntimicrobial040401 food scienceAnti-Bacterial AgentsDisease Models AnimalBayesian survival analysisHigh Hydrostatic PressureSalmonella entericaSalmonella InfectionsbacteriaAntimicrobialPlant PreparationsS typhimuriumFood ScienceInternational Journal of Food Microbiology
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BCL-xL, a Mitochondrial Protein Involved in Successful Aging: From C. elegans to Human Centenarians

2020

B-Cell Lymphoma-extra-large (BCL-xL) is involved in longevity and successful aging, which indicates a role for BCL-xL in cell survival pathway regulation. Beyond its well described role as an inhibitor of apoptosis by preventing cytochrome c release, BCL-xL has also been related, indirectly, to autophagy and senescence pathways. Although in these latter cases, BCL-xL has dual roles, either activating or inhibiting, depending on the cell type and the specific conditions. Taken together, all these findings suggest a precise mechanism of action for BCL-xL, able to regulate the crosstalk between apoptosis, autophagy, and senescence, thus promoting cell survival or cell death. All three pathways…

SenescenceautophagyAgingProgrammed cell deathsenescencemedia_common.quotation_subjectbcl-X ProteinBcl-xLReviewMitochondrionInhibitor of apoptosisCatalysislcsh:ChemistryMitochondrial ProteinsInorganic Chemistry03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinelongevityAnimalsHumansPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryCaenorhabditis eleganslcsh:QH301-705.5Molecular BiologySpectroscopy030304 developmental biologymedia_commonAged 80 and over0303 health sciencesbiologyOrganic ChemistryAutophagyapoptosisLongevityGeneral MedicineComputer Science ApplicationsCell biologymitochondriaCrosstalk (biology)lcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999healthy aging030220 oncology & carcinogenesisbiology.proteinFisiologia humanaInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
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Molecular cloning and primary structure of a Rhesus (Rh)-like protein from the marine sponge Geodia cydonium

1997

In humans, the 30,000 M(r) Rhesus (Rh) polypeptide D (RhD) is a dominant antigen (Ag) of the Rh blood group system. To date, an Rh-like protein has been found in chimpanzees, gorillas, gibbons, and rhesus monkeys. Related to the 30,000 M(r) Rh Ag protein are two polypeptides of 50,000 M(r), the human 50,000 M(r) Rh Ag and the RhD-like protein from Caenorhabditis elegans. The function of all these proteins is not sufficiently known. Here we characterize a cDNA clone (GCRH) encoding a putative 57,000 M(r) polypeptide from the marine sponge Geodia cydonium, which shares sequence similarity both to the RhD Ag and the Rh50 glycoprotein. The sponge Rh-like protein comprises 523 aa residues; hydro…

Signal peptideDNA ComplementaryMolecular Sequence DataImmunologyMolecular cloningGeneticsAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularCaenorhabditis elegansGlycoproteinschemistry.chemical_classificationRh-Hr Blood-Group SystemBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino AcidbiologyProtein primary structurebiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyPoriferaSpongeTransmembrane domainchemistryGlycoproteinRh blood group systemImmunogenetics
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Intrinsically disordered protein PID-2 modulates Z granules and is required for heritable piRNA-induced silencing in the Caenorhabditis elegans embryo

2020

Abstract In Caenorhabditis elegans, the piRNA (21U RNA) pathway is required to establish proper gene regulation and an immortal germline. To achieve this, PRG‐1‐bound 21U RNAs trigger silencing mechanisms mediated by RNA‐dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP)‐synthetized 22G RNAs. This silencing can become PRG‐1‐independent and heritable over many generations, a state termed RNA‐induced epigenetic gene silencing (RNAe). How and when RNAe is established, and how it is maintained, is not known. We show that maternally provided 21U RNAs can be sufficient for triggering RNAe in embryos. Additionally, we identify PID‐2, a protein containing intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs), as a factor required …

Small RNAPiwi-interacting RNApiRNABiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyArticleEpigenesis Genetic570 Life sciences03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineProtein DomainsRNA polymeraseGene silencingAnimalsEpigeneticsGene SilencingRNA Small InterferingPID‐5Caenorhabditis elegansCaenorhabditis elegans ProteinsMolecular BiologyPID‐4Caenorhabditis elegans030304 developmental biologyPID‐2Regulation of gene expression0303 health sciencesGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyGeneral NeuroscienceRNAGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalArticlesbiology.organism_classificationRNA BiologyCell biologyIntrinsically Disordered ProteinschemistryArgonaute ProteinsZ granuleDevelopment & Differentiation030217 neurology & neurosurgeryProtein Binding570 Biowissenschaften
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Adaptive reference-free compression of sequence quality scores

2014

Motivation: Rapid technological progress in DNA sequencing has stimulated interest in compressing the vast datasets that are now routinely produced. Relatively little attention has been paid to compressing the quality scores that are assigned to each sequence, even though these scores may be harder to compress than the sequences themselves. By aggregating a set of reads into a compressed index, we find that the majority of bases can be predicted from the sequence of bases that are adjacent to them and hence are likely to be less informative for variant calling or other applications. The quality scores for such bases are aggressively compressed, leaving a relatively small number at full reso…

Statistics and ProbabilityFOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectReference-freecomputer.software_genreBiochemistryDNA sequencingSet (abstract data type)Redundancy (information theory)BWTComputer Science - Data Structures and AlgorithmsCode (cryptography)AnimalsHumansQuality (business)Data Structures and Algorithms (cs.DS)Quantitative Biology - GenomicsCaenorhabditis elegansMolecular Biologymedia_commonGenomics (q-bio.GN)SequenceGenomeSettore INF/01 - Informaticareference-free compressionHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingGenomicsSequence Analysis DNAData CompressioncompressionComputer Science ApplicationsComputational MathematicsComputational Theory and MathematicsFOS: Biological sciencesData miningquality scoreMetagenomicscomputerBWT; compression; quality score; reference-free compressionAlgorithmsReference genome
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Evolutionary relationships among the members of an ancient class of non-LTR retrotransposons found in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans.

1998

We took advantage of the massive amount of sequence information generated by the Caenorhabditis elegans genome project to perform a comprehensive analysis of a group of over 100 related sequences that has allowed us to describe two new C. elegans non-LTR retrotransposons. We named them Sam and Frodo. We also determined that several highly divergent subfamilies of both elements exist in C. elegans. It is likely that several master copies have been active at the same time in C. elegans, although only a few copies of both Sam and Frodo have characteristics that are compatible with them being active today. We discuss whether it is more appropriate under these circumstances to define only 2 elem…

SubfamilyGene Transfer HorizontalRetroelementsMolecular Sequence DataGene DosageRetrotransposonClass (philosophy)BiologyGenomeEvolution MolecularMonophylyOpen Reading FramesGeneticsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceCaenorhabditis elegansCaenorhabditis elegans ProteinsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCaenorhabditis elegansPhylogenySequence (medicine)GeneticsGenomeComputational BiologyRNA-Directed DNA PolymeraseGenome projectDNA Helminthbiology.organism_classificationEndonucleasesLong Interspersed Nucleotide ElementsEvolutionary biologyMultigene FamilyNucleic Acid ConformationSequence AlignmentMolecular biology and evolution
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Sponge proteins are more similar to those of Homo sapiens than to Caenorhabditis elegans

2000

We compared 42 phylogenetically conserved proteins from four marine sponges [Porifera] with almost the complete set of Caenorhabditis elegans proteins and all known proteins from humans. The majority of the sponge proteins are significantly more similar to human than to C. elegans orthologues/homologues. This finding reflects the accelerated evolutionary rate in the C. elegans lineage, since sponges split off first from the common ancestor of all multicellular animals. Furthermore, three sponge/human proteins were not found in C. elegans: (2–5)A synthetase, DNA repair helicase and lens βγ -crystallin. Sponges are the source of the most ancient proteins already present in the common ancestor…

SystematicsxbiologyDNA repairLineage (evolution)ZoologyHelicasebiology.organism_classificationSpongeMulticellular organismEvolutionary biologyHomo sapiensbiology.proteinEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCaenorhabditis elegans
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Toxicological assessment of mesoporous silica particles in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans

2018

[EN] Here we report the toxicological evaluation of mesoporous silica particles (MSPs) in the nematode C. elegans. Specifically, we have investigated the effect of bare micro- (M0) and nano-sized (N0) MSPs, and their corresponding functionalized particles with a starch derivative (Glu-N) (M1 and N1, respectively) on C. elegans ageing parameters. The toxicity of MSPs, their impact on C. elegans lifespan, movement capacity, progeny and ability to survive upon exposure to acute oxidative stress were assessed. This study demonstrated that both size particles assayed (M0 and N0), labeled with rhodamine and monitored through fluorescence microscopy, are ingested by the nematode. Moreover, toxicit…

TECNOLOGIA DE ALIMENTOSNematodesLongevityNanoparticle02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistrymedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesBiochemistrySurface FunctionalizationRhodaminechemistry.chemical_compoundQUIMICA ORGANICAIn vivoToxicity TestsOral intakemedicineAnimalsParticle SizeCaenorhabditis elegansGeneral Environmental ScienceLifespanChemistryQUIMICA INORGANICAStarchMesoporous silicaSilicon Dioxide021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesOxidative StressMesoporous SilicaNanotoxicologyToxicityBiophysicsNanoparticlesHealthspan0210 nano-technologyMesoporous materialOxidative stressEnvironmental Research
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Synaptic tetraspan vesicle membrane proteins are conserved but not needed for synaptogenesis and neuronal function in Caenorhabditis elegans

2006

Tetraspan vesicle membrane proteins (TVPs) comprise a major portion of synaptic vesicle proteins, yet their contribution to the synaptic vesicle cycle is poorly understood. TVPs are grouped in three mammalian gene families: physins, gyrins, and secretory carrier-associated membrane proteins (SCAMPs). In Caenorhabditis elegans , only a single member of each of these families exists. These three nematode TVPs colocalize to the same vesicular compartment when expressed in mammalian cells, suggesting that they could serve overlapping functions. To examine their function, C. elegans null mutants were isolated for each gene, and a triple mutant was generated. Surprisingly, these animals develop …

TetraspaninsMutantSynaptogenesisSynaptic vesicleEvolution MolecularAnimalsHumansCloning MolecularCaenorhabditis elegansIntegral membrane proteinCells CulturedCaenorhabditis elegansNeuronsMultidisciplinaryModels GeneticbiologyChemotaxisCell MembraneMembrane ProteinsBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationSynaptic vesicle cycleCell biologyElectrophysiologyMembrane proteinMutationSynapsesSynaptophysinbiology.proteinProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Protease-mediated processing of Argonaute proteins controls small RNA association

2020

SummarySmall RNA pathways defend the germlines of animals against selfish genetic elements and help to maintain genomic integrity. At the same time, their activity needs to be well-controlled to prevent silencing of ‘self’ genes. Here, we reveal a proteolytic mechanism that controls endogenous small interfering (22G) RNA activity in the Caenorhabditis elegans germline to protect genome integrity and maintain fertility. We find that WAGO-1 and WAGO-3 Argonaute (Ago) proteins are matured through proteolytic processing of their unusually proline-rich N-termini. In the absence of DPF-3, a P-granule-localized N-terminal dipeptidase orthologous to mammalian DPP8/9, processing fails, causing a cha…

Transposable elementSmall RNAanimal structuresDNA damageBiologyDipeptidyl peptidaseSubstrate Specificity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAnimalsGene silencingRNA MessengerRNA Small InterferingCaenorhabditis elegansCaenorhabditis elegans ProteinsDipeptidyl-Peptidases and Tripeptidyl-PeptidasesMolecular BiologyGeneCaenorhabditis elegans030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesWild typeRNACell BiologyArgonautebiology.organism_classificationCell biologyFertilityArgonaute ProteinsProteolysisRNA HelminthProtein Processing Post-Translational030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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