Abstract

Traditionally Caenorhabditis elegans lifespan assays are performed by manually inspecting nematodes with a dissection microscope, which involves daily counting of live/dead worms cultured in Petri plates for 21–25 days. This manual inspection requires the screening of hundreds of worms to ensure statistical robustness, and is therefore a time-consuming approach. In recent years, various automated artificial vision systems have been reported to increase the throughput, however they usually provide less accurate results than manual assays. The main problems identified when using these vision systems are the false positives and false negatives, which occur due to culture media changes, occluded zones, dirtiness or condensation of the Petri plates. In this work, we developed and described a new C. elegans monitoring machine, SiViS, which consists of a flexible and compact platform design to analyse C. elegans cultures using the standard Petri plates seeded with E. coli. Our system uses an active vision illumination technique and different image-processing pipelines for motion detection, both previously reported, providing a fully automated image processing pipeline. In addition, this study validated both these methods and the feasibility of the SiViS machine for lifespan experiments by comparing them with manual lifespan assays. Results demonstrated that the automated system yields consistent replicates (p-value log rank test 0.699), and there are no significant differences between automated system assays and traditionally manual assays (p-value 0.637). Finally, although we have focused on the use of SiViS in longevity assays, the system configuration is flexible and can, thus, be adapted to other C. elegans studies such as toxicity, mobility and behaviour.

Highlights

  • Caenorhabditis elegans lifespan assays are performed by manually inspecting nematodes with a dissection microscope, which involves daily counting of live/dead worms cultured in Petri plates for 21–25 days

  • C. elegans has been successfully used as a biological model for a wide range of studies related with development, longevity and diseases

  • Our system is characterized by its compact, flexible, scalable and used-friendly design. This newly described method for C. elegans lifespan assays is based on the integration of different computer vision techniques, such as active ­vision[30] and adaptive motion detection ­techniques[31], which we evaluated together

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Summary

Introduction

Caenorhabditis elegans lifespan assays are performed by manually inspecting nematodes with a dissection microscope, which involves daily counting of live/dead worms cultured in Petri plates for 21–25 days. Just slight heat exposure induces hyperthermia, which reduces life expectancy and causes death Both stimuli cause stress in the nematodes, protocols are based on storing cultures in temperature-controlled incubators under dark conditions during the assay, exposing them to ambient conditions only in short inspection periods (a few minutes every day) under the dissection microscopes. The C. elegans lifespan ­assay[1, 6] has been performed manually by expert inspection using a dissection microscope, and counting every day the number of nematodes surviving under specific culture c­ onditions[7,8,9,10,11] in standard Petri dishes. This task, which has to be done to each worm successively, is both arduous and laborious

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