Worm Breeder's Gazette 8(2): 13

These abstracts should not be cited in bibliographies. Material contained herein should be treated as personal communication and should be cited as such only with the consent of the author.

NMR Study of Energy Metabolism During Larval Development

W.G. Wadsworth, D.L. Riddle

Figure 1

Using phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), the major 
phosphorus-containing metabolites of C.  elegans have been detected in 
perchloric acid extracts.  A new unidentified compound giving a major 
resonance in the phosphodiester region of the spectrum was detected.  
This resonance does not correspond to phosphocreatine, phosphoarginine 
or several other common phosphodiesters tested.  The relative 
concentrations of metabolites change during the life cycle, producing 
distinct NMR spectra which correlate with differences in the metabolic 
pathway being preferentially utilized by the nematode.  During the L1 
stage, NMR spectra showed low concentrations of ATP, ADP, and 
inorganic phosphate relative to the other peaks present.  These 
metabolite concentrations are probably associated with high activity 
of the glyoxylate metabolic pathway known to be present in C.  elegans.
Through the L2, L3 and L4 larval stages, NMR spectra reflect much 
higher concentrations of ADP, ATP, and the unknown phosphodiester.  
This most likely indicates increased respiration via the TCA cycle.  
Finally, the predominant signal in dauer larvae (as well as in starved 
L2 and L3 larvae) corresponds to inorganic phosphate.  This low energy 
state in dauers returned to the higher energy state characteristic 
growing L2, L3, and L4 larvae within 4 hours after the dauer larvae 
resumed feeding in the presence of bacteria.  Energy metabolism in C.  
elegans  is, therefore, highly variable with switches between 
metabolic states readily occurring.
The ability to utilize different metabolic strategies was further 
studied by the use of dauer-constitutive mutations in the genes daf-7 
and daf-2.  These temperature-sensitive mutants form dauer larvae at 
25 C regardless of other environmental cues, thereby allowing dauer 
formation to be studied under the same environmental conditions as non-
dauer larva development.  Pre-dauer L2 larvae (L2d) did not show the 
high energy metabolism of pre-L3 L2 larvae but instead showed spectra 
corresponding to that of L1 larvae.  This may indicate that the 
glyoxylate pathway was being utilized and the TCA pathway did not 
predominate during dauer larva formation.  We conclude from these 
results that C.  elegans  metabolism responds to environmental change, 
but is also developmentally regulated.  Isolation and identification 
of the unknown phosphodiester and a study of glyoxylate-specific and 
TCA-specific enzyme activities during larval development are currently 
in progress.
[See Figure 1]

Figure 1