Affiliation:
1. 2Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology, Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Herts AL5 2JQ, UK;, Email: keith.davies@bbsrc.ac.uk
2. 1Endocrine Pharmaceuticals, Wilderness End, Tadley Common Road, Tadley, Hants RG26 3TA, UK
Abstract
Abstract
In this study using Caenorhabditis elegans, we have been able to suppress
(>60%) and enhance (>40%) fecundity (number of offspring) while
extending lifespan by a fifth, by administering synthetic peptides to the
aqueous medium in which the nematodes were maintained. Untreated control
adults fed live bacteria had significantly more offspring (17 vs 10 larvae
each) than those fed dead bacteria. Average lifespan and time for 50% of the
worms to die were the same at approximately 10 days, but there was a
significant difference in terms of 100% mortality (28 vs 19 days). A
reduction in fecundity of 30-40% occurred when a 14-mer peptide, EPL030, was
administered to the worms' aqueous medium. The effect was dose-dependent
across the range 0.1-10 μM day–1 of medium, but since the worms were fed
live bacteria interpretation was problematic: was the effect direct or
indirect? However, the anti-fecundity effect was reproduced in worms fed
dead bacteria, when the test compound was administered at 1 μM day–1 of
aqueous medium. The mean number of larvae produced in three groups:
untreated controls, EPL030 and EPL001 (an anagrammatical version of EPL030
used as a comparator), were, respectively, 17, 6 (−64%) and 24 (+43%).
Average lifespans were 8.7, 10.7 (+23%) and 10.3 days (+18%). Fluorescence
localisation studies using a close analogue of the fecundity-suppressing
EPL030 revealed a distribution that was generalised and uninformative. The
fecundity-enhancing EPL001 concentrated in the genital tract. Caenorhabditis
elegans is a potentially useful testbed for fecundity and lifespan studies
using exogenous agents. The use of an aqueous medium and dead bacteria as
food simplifies both the protocol and interpretation of results.
Subject
Agronomy and Crop Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
8 articles.
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