Summary

Volatile Sex Pheromone Extraction and Chemoattraction Assay in Caenorhabditis elegans

Published: August 09, 2024
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Summary

This protocol establishes methods for extracting and quantifying responses to the volatile sex pheromone in C. elegans, providing tools to study chemical communication and navigation trajectory.

Abstract

Chemical communication is vital in organismal health, reproduction, and overall well-being. Understanding the molecular pathways, neural processes, and computations governing these signals remains an active area of research. The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans provides a powerful model for studying these processes as it produces a volatile sex pheromone. This pheromone is synthesized by virgin females or sperm-depleted hermaphrodites and serves as an attractant for males.

This protocol describes a detailed method for isolating the volatile sex pheromone from several C. elegans strains (WT strain N2, daf-22, and fog-2) and C. remanei. We also provide a protocol for quantifying the male chemotaxis response to the volatile sex pheromone. Our analysis utilizes measurements such as chemotaxis index (C.I.), arrival time (A.T.), and a trajectory plot to compare male responses under various conditions accurately. This method allows for robust comparisons between males of different genetic backgrounds or developmental stages. Furthermore, the experimental setup outlined here is adaptable to investigating other chemoattraction chemicals.

Introduction

The interplay between chemical communication and reproductive success is a fundamental principle across the animal kingdom1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10. Sex pheromones trigger a wide array of sexually dimorphic behaviors essential for locating mates, coordinating the steps involved in finding and attracting a partner, and ultimately promoting the propagation of a species11,12,13,14,15,16,17. Significant progress has been made in understanding pheromone signaling, but the molecular mechanisms, neural circuits, and computational processes governing these interactions often remain incompletely defined18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26.

The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans provides a powerful model for dissecting these questions. Notably, C. elegans exhibits an unusual reproductive strategy-hermaphrodites can self-fertilize but also outcross with males27,28,29,30,31,32,33. This flexibility requires a robust communication system to signal reproductive status. C. elegans is known for its well-characterized water-soluble pheromones, the ascarosides, which play varied roles in development, behavior, and social interactions. Recent discoveries have unveiled a distinct class of volatile sex pheromones employed by nematodes. These pheromones are specifically produced by sexually mature C. elegans and C. remanei virgin females and sperm-depleted hermaphrodites, serving as an attractant for adult males29,34,35. This attractant exhibits remarkable sexual dimorphism in its production and perception. The female somatic gonad governs the synthesis of this volatile sex pheromone, and production dynamically reflects reproductive status, ceasing upon mating and resuming several hours later29,34.

Understanding nematode sex pheromone communication provides insights into the evolution of chemical communication systems, the interplay between reproductive state and behavior, and the mechanisms underlying sexually dimorphic neural processing24,26,36,37,38,39. Studies implicate the amphid neuron AWA in males as critical for pheromone detection, with the G-protein-coupled receptor SRD-1 playing a key role in pheromone detection in males24. C. elegans is well-suited for studying animal chemical communication, especially sex pheromone signaling, due to its reliance on the olfactory system for mate-searching. While much is known about ascaroside signaling, the volatile sex pheromone system offers unique opportunities for comparison25,26,36,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,
51,52,53,54,55,56,57. Moreover, C. elegans is a powerful genetic model organism due to its fully sequenced genome, clearly defined cellular lineage, and well-characterized olfactory mutants.

However, the complete neural circuitry involved in processing this pheromone, the computations that translate its perception into targeted mate-searching behaviors, and its biosynthesis regulation remain to be fully elucidated. Further investigations into these processes are crucial for understanding the diverse mechanisms governing animal communication and reproductive behaviors. The identification of key genes involved in pheromone synthesis, secretion, and perception promises to unveil novel molecular players in animal communication. The assays described here provide a basis to address these questions.

Protocol

1. Crude sex pheromone extraction from females and hermaphrodites Protocol for C. elegans Synchronization Preparation of adult females or hermaphrodites Monitor culture plates daily until a large population of adult female/hermaphrodites exists and the OP50 food source depletes. Using fog-2 C. elegans and WT C. remanei females for crude sex pheromone extraction, prepare synchronized eggs from the mated females. NOTE: In this protoc…

Representative Results

Trajectory analysis of volatile sex pheromone perception defective strain in chemoattraction assay This chemoattraction assay reliably differentiates between wild-type and mutant strains of C. elegans in their response to volatile sex pheromones. Successful experiments with him-5 males consistently demonstrate robust chemotaxis towards the pheromone source. This is reflected in a high chemotaxis index (C.I.) (Figure 2), often exceeding 0.5, indicating…

Discussion

This protocol provides a robust methodology for the extraction of volatile sex pheromones from C. elegans, along with establishing a robust chemoattraction assay to measure male chemoattraction responses. Additional information can be found in the WormLab user guide (see the Table of Materials); for a basic code to visualize worm movement trajectory, see protocol section 7.3.8.5. Several crucial steps in the protocol are important for the outcome. First, careful synchronization of worm populatio…

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Dr. Tingtao Zhou for designing and writing the code for the trajectory visualizations used in our analysis. This work was supported by funding: R01 NS113119 (PWS), Chen senior postdoc fellowship, and the Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience.

Materials

10 cm Petri dishes Falcon 25373-100 Falcon bacteriological Petri dish 100 x 15 mm
6 cm Petri dishes Falcon 25373-085 Falcon bacteriological Petri dish 60 x 15 mm
C. remanei (EM464) CGC
Centrifuge Eppendorf centrifuge 5418  Any brand should work.
Chemoattraction assay plates Homemade solution N/A 1.5% agar, 25 mM NaCl, 1.5 mM Tris-base, and 3.5 mM Tris-Cl
Cholesterol Alfa Aesar 57-88-5
Dissecting Microscope Leica LeicaMZ75  Any brand should work.
E. Coli OP50 CGC
Ethanol Koptec 64-17-5
fog-2(q71) (JK574) CGC
him-5(e1490)(CB4088) CGC
Household bleach Clorox Germicidal bleach concentrated  Bleach
M9 buffer Homemade solution N/A 3 g KH2PO4, 11.3 g Na2HPO4.7H2O, 5 g NaCl, H2O to 1 L. Sterilize by autoclaving. Add 1 mL 1 M MgSO4 after cool down to room temperature.
Magnesium Sulfate, Anhydrous, Powder Macron M1063-500GM-EA
Microwave TOSHIBA N/A  Any brand should work.
N2 CGC
NaOH Sigma-aldrich S318-3 1 M
NGM plates solution Homemade solution N/A 2.5 g Peptone, 18 g agar, 3 g NaCl, H2O to 1 L.Sterilize by autoclaving. Once the autoclave is done (2 h), wait until the temperature of the medium drops to 65 °C. Put on a hotplate at 65 °C and stir. Then add the following, waiting 5 min between each to avoid crystallization: 1 mL CaCl2 (1 M), 1 mL MgSO4 (1 M), 25 mL K3PO4 (1 M, pH=6), 1 mL Cholesterol ( 5 mg/mL in ethanol).
Parafilm Bemis 13-374-10 Bemis Parafilm M Laboratory Wrapping Film
Peptone VWR 97063-324
Pipet- aid Drummond Scientific  4-000-100  Any brand should work.
Plastic paper  Octago Waterproof Screen Printing Inkjet Transparency Film https://www.amazon.com/Octago-Waterproof-Transparency-Printing-Printers/dp/B08HJQWFGD
Potassium chloride Sigma-aldrich SLBP2366V
Potassium phosphate Spectrum 7778-77-0
Pipette Eppendorf SKU: EPPR4331; MFG#: 2231300006 20 – 200 µL, 100 – 1000 µL, any brand should work.
Rotator Labnet SKU: LI-H5500  Labnet H5500 Mini LabRoller with Dual Direction Rotator. Any brand should work.
Sodium chloride VWR 7647-14-5
sodium phosphate dibasic Sigma-aldrich SLCG3888
Tris-base Sigma-aldrich 77-86-1
Tris-Cl  Roche 1185-53-1
Tryptone VWR 97063-390
Vortex Scientific industries Vortex-Genie 2  Any brand should work.
WormLab system  MBF Bioscience N/A https://www.mbfbioscience.com/help/WormLab/Content/home.htm; https://www.mbfbioscience.com/products/wormlab/
Wormpicker Homemade  N/A made with platinum and glass pipet tips

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Cite This Article
Wan, X., Sternberg, P. W. Volatile Sex Pheromone Extraction and Chemoattraction Assay in Caenorhabditis elegans. J. Vis. Exp. (210), e67115, doi:10.3791/67115 (2024).

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