Abstract

The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is an important model organism for biomedical research and genetic studies relevant to human biology and disease. Such studies are often based on high-resolution imaging of dynamic biological processes in the worm body tissues, requiring well-immobilized and physiologically active animals in order to avoid movement-related artifacts and to obtain meaningful biological information. However, existing immobilization methods employ the application of either anesthetics or servere physical constraints, by using glue or specific microfluidic on-chip mechanical structures, which in some cases may strongly affect physiological processes of the animals. Here, we immobilize C. elegans nematodes by taking advantage of a biocompatible and temperature-responsive hydrogel-microbead matrix. Our gel-based immobilization technique does not require a specific chip design and enables fast and reversible immobilization, thereby allowing successive imaging of the same single worm or of small worm populations at all development stages for several days. We successfully demonstrated the applicability of this method in challenging worm imaging contexts, in particular by applying it for high-resolution confocal imaging of the mitochondrial morphology in worm body wall muscle cells and for the long-term quantification of number and size of specific protein aggregates in different C. elegans neurodegenerative disease models. Our approach was also suitable for immobilizing other small organisms, such as the larvae of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster and the unicellular parasite Trypanosoma brucei. We anticipate that this versatile technique will significantly simplify biological assay-based longitudinal studies and long-term observation of small model organisms.

Highlights

  • 40% of the about 20,000 C. elegans protein coding genes are functional orthologues of their human counterparts [1]

  • In C. elegans, as in humans, a decline in mitochondrial function plays a key role in the aging process, while altered mitochondrial dynamics is known to be implicated in many diseases, including neurodegenerative disorders [8,9,10,11]

  • We demonstrated that our approach is suitable for the accurate observation of the long-term dynamics of mitochondrial fusion and fission processes in worms subjected to different RNA interference (RNAi) treatments

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Summary

Introduction

40% of the about 20,000 C. elegans protein coding genes are functional orthologues of their human counterparts [1]. Prior to the imaging of protein aggregation in neurodegenerative worm strains by wide-field fluorescent microscopy, we evaluated our gel-based immobilization technique through the challenging application of confocal imaging of mitochondrial morphology, which has been associated with several neurodegenerative disorders [6].

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