RRC ID 53500
Author Palmisano NJ, Meléndez A.
Title Detection of Autophagy in Caenorhabditis elegans.
Journal Cold Spring Harb Protoc
Abstract Autophagy is a dynamic and catabolic process that results in the breakdown and recycling of cellular components through the autophagosomal-lysosomal pathway. Many autophagy genes identified in yeasts and mammals have orthologs in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. In recent years, gene inactivation by RNA interference (RNAi) and chromosomal mutations has been useful to probe the functions of autophagy in C. elegans, and a role for autophagy has been shown to contribute to multiple processes, such as the adaptation to stress, longevity, cell death, cell growth control, clearance of aggregation-prone proteins, degradation of P granules during embryogenesis, and apoptotic cell clearance. Here, we discuss some of these roles and describe methods that can be used to study autophagy in C. elegans. Specifically, we summarize how to visualize autophagy in embryos, larva, or adults, how to detect the lipidation of the ubiquitin-like modifier LGG-1 by western blot, and how to inactivate autophagy genes by RNAi.
Volume 2016(2)
Pages pdb.top070466
Published 2016-2-1
DOI 10.1101/pdb.top070466
PII 2016/2/pdb.top070466
PMID 26832690
MeSH Animals Autophagy* Blotting, Western / methods Caenorhabditis elegans / physiology* Gene Knockdown Techniques Molecular Biology / methods* Optical Imaging / methods* Parasitology / methods* RNA Interference
Resource
C.elegans tm3949 tm3948 tm831 tm3489