Selected Grantee Publications
The Effect of Common Paralytic Agents Used for Fluorescence Imaging on Redox Tone and ATP Levels in Caenorhabditis elegans
Morton et al., PLOS One. 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38669260
Caenorhabditis elegans is a highly valuable model organism in biological research. However, these worms must be paralyzed for most imaging applications, and the effect that common chemical anesthetics may have on the parameters measured—especially biochemical measurements such as cellular energetics and redox tone—is poorly understood. In this study, the authors used two reporters—QUEEN-2m for relative ATP levels and reduction-oxidation–sensitive green fluorescent protein for redox tone—to assess the impact of commonly used chemical paralytics. The results show that all chemical anesthetics at doses required for full paralysis alter redox tone and/or ATP levels, and anesthetic use alters the detected outcome of rotenone exposure on relative ATP levels and redox tone. Therefore, it is important to tailor the use of anesthetics to different endpoints and experimental questions and to develop less disruptive paralytic methods for optimal imaging of dynamic in vivo reporters. Supported by ORIP (P40OD010440, R44OD024963) and NIEHS.
GenomeMUSter Mouse Genetic Variation Service Enables Multitrait, Multipopulation Data Integration and Analysis
Ball et al., Genome Research. 2024.
https://genome.cshlp.org/content/34/1/145.long
Advances in genetics, including transcriptome-wide and phenome-wide association analysis methods, create compelling new opportunities for using fully reproducible and widely studied inbred mouse strains to characterize the polygenetic basis for individual differences in disease-related traits. Investigators developed an imputation approach and implemented data service to provide a broad and more comprehensive mouse variant resource. They evaluated the strain-specific imputation accuracy on a “held-out” test set that was not used in the imputation process. The authors present its application to multipopulation and multispecies analyses of complex trait variation in type 2 diabetes and substance use disorders and compare these results to human genetics studies. Supported by ORIP (U42OD010921, P40OD011102, R24OD035408), NCI, NIAAA, NIDA, and NIDCD.