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Published May 12, 2009 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

A shortcut to identifying small molecule signals that regulate behavior and development in Caenorhabditis elegans

Abstract

Small molecule metabolites play important roles in Caenorhabditis elegans biology, but effective approaches for identifying their chemical structures are lacking. Recent studies revealed that a family of glycosides, the ascarosides, differentially regulate C. elegans development and behavior. Low concentrations of ascarosides attract males and thus appear to be part of the C. elegans sex pheromone, whereas higher concentrations induce developmental arrest at the dauer stage, an alternative, nonaging larval stage. The ascarosides act synergistically, which presented challenges for their identification via traditional activity-guided fractionation. As a result the chemical characterization of the dauer and male attracting pheromones remained incomplete. Here, we describe the identification of several additional pheromone components by using a recently developed NMR-spectroscopic approach, differential analysis by 2D NMR spectroscopy (DANS), which simplifies linking small molecule metabolites with their biological function. DANS-based comparison of wild-type C. elegans and a signaling-deficient mutant, daf-22, enabled identification of 3 known and 4 previously undescribed ascarosides, including a compound that features a p-aminobenzoic acid subunit. Biological testing of synthetic samples of these compounds revealed additional evidence for synergy and provided insights into structure–activity relationships. Using a combination of the three most active ascarosides allowed full reconstitution of the male-attracting activity of wild-type pheromone extract. Our results highlight the efficacy of DANS as a method for identifying small-molecule metabolites and placing them within a specific genetic context. This study further supports the hypothesis that ascarosides represent a structurally diverse set of nematode signaling molecules regulating major life history traits.

Additional Information

© 2009 by the National Academy of Sciences. Edited by Jerrold Meinwald, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, and approved March 3, 2009 (received for review November 22, 2008). Author contributions: C.P., J.S., P.W.S., and F.C.S. designed research; C.P., J.S., B.W.F., R.U.M., and F.C.S. performed research; B.W.F., R.U.M., and A.H.L. contributed new reagents/ analytic tools; C.P., J.S., P.W.S., and F.C.S. analyzed data; and C.P., J.S., P.W.S., and F.C.S. wrote the paper. We thank Art Edison and Fatma Kaplan for helpful discussions, Olena Vatamaniuk for assistance with C. elegans liquid cultures, and Ivan Keresztes for assistance with NMR spectroscopy. This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grant P41 GM079571 (to F.C.S.) and by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (J.S., P.W.S.).

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Published - Pungaliya2009p4254P_Natl_Acad_Sci_Usa.pdf

Supplemental Material - Pungaliya2009p4254P_Natl_Acad_Sci_Usa_supp.pdf

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