Abstract

Simple SummaryWe propose a pond assay for the sensory systems (PASS) of Caenorhabditis elegans as a novel method of behavioral analysis. In PASS, the test solution is injected into a recess(es) formed on agar and the response of C. elegans to its odor and/or taste is examined. Once C. elegans individuals fall into recesses (ponds) filled with liquid, they cannot return to the solid medium. In this way, the animals are trapped with certainty without the use of anesthesia. The anesthesia used to keep animals in the attractant area in conventional chemotaxis assays is no longer required, allowing pure evaluation of the response to specific substances. Furthermore, the test itself can be greatly streamlined because the preparation can be completed simply by providing a recess(es) and filling the liquid. The present paper reports the detailed method and effectiveness of the novel PASS through a series of chemotaxis assays. By using the PASS method, we found that the olfactory system of C. elegans accurately senses odors even at extremely low concentrations lower than the previously known detection threshold. This method can be applied to biosensor technology that uses C. elegans to detect chemical substances present at extremely low concentrations in environmental samples and biological samples with high sensitivity.Chemotaxis in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans has basically been examined using conventional assay methods. Although these can be problematic, for example, in their use of anesthesia, the method has never been improved. We propose a pond assay for the sensory systems (PASS) of C. elegans as a novel population-based method of behavioral analysis. The test solution is injected into a recess(es) formed on agar and the response of C. elegans to its odor and/or taste is examined. Once C. elegans individuals fall into recesses (ponds) filled with liquid, they cannot return to a solid medium. In this way, the animals are trapped with certainty without the use of anesthesia. The anesthesia used to keep animals in the attractant area in conventional chemotaxis assays is no longer required, allowing pure evaluation of the attractant or repellent response to specific substances. Furthermore, the assay itself can be greatly streamlined because the preparation can be completed simply by providing a recess(es) and filling the liquid. The present paper reports the detailed method and effectiveness of the novel PASS.

Highlights

  • The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is a well-established model organism for investigating vital mechanisms, such as neural behaviors, development, and aging [1,2]

  • We proposed a pond assay for the sensory systems, PASS, applicable for detecting the chemotaxis of C. elegans

  • We proposed a pond assay for the sensory systems of C. elegans as an improved method of evaluating behavioral response and a certain experimenter was performed assays in the same experimental environment

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Summary

Introduction

The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is a well-established model organism for investigating vital mechanisms, such as neural behaviors, development, and aging [1,2]. It takes time to dry the test solution and the anesthesia, and the diffusion of the anesthesia over time affects the evaluation of the response to the substance being tested. When the animals enter the area where the anesthesia has been dropped, they cannot escape and are trapped. This phenomenon makes an accurate response evaluation difficult and the factual nature of the conclusions cannot be guaranteed. Animals are often affected by adaptation to chemical substances and associative learning over time, there is an additional problem that the results can vary from trial to trial due to the effects of anesthesia and adaptation

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