Abstract

Caenorhabditis elegans is an excellent model for high‐throughput experimental approaches but lacks an automated means to pinpoint time of death during survival assays over a short time frame, that is, easy to implement, highly scalable, robust, and versatile. Here, we describe an automated, label‐free, high‐throughput method using death‐associated fluorescence to monitor nematode population survival (dubbed LFASS for label‐free automated survival scoring), which we apply to severe stress and infection resistance assays. We demonstrate its use to define correlations between age, longevity, and severe stress resistance, and its applicability to parasitic nematodes. The use of LFASS to assess the effects of aging on susceptibility to severe stress revealed an unexpected increase in stress resistance with advancing age, which was largely autophagy‐dependent. Correlation analysis further revealed that while severe thermal stress resistance positively correlates with lifespan, severe oxidative stress resistance does not. This supports the view that temperature‐sensitive protein‐handling processes more than redox homeostasis underpin aging in C. elegans. That the ages of peak resistance to infection, severe oxidative stress, heat shock, and milder stressors differ markedly suggests that stress resistance and health span do not show a simple correspondence in C. elegans.

Highlights

  • If you believe this document infringes copyright please contact the KAR admin team with the take-down information provided at http://kar.kent.ac.uk/contact.html

  • LFASS for label‐free automated survival scoring), which we apply to severe stress tween age, longevity, and severe stress resistance, and its applicability to parasitic

  • That the ages of peak resistance to infection, severe oxidative stress, heat shock, and milder stressors differ markedly suggests that stress resistance and health span do not show a simple correspondence in C. elegans

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Summary

Introduction

If you believe this document infringes copyright please contact the KAR admin team with the take-down information provided at http://kar.kent.ac.uk/contact.html. Aging, autophagy, C. elegans, infection, stress, survival 2.2 | LFASS reveals a rise and fall in severe stress resistance during C. elegans aging nurenine pathway (Coburn et al, 2013).

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