Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon, 1254 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, 97403-1254, USA.
Int J Parasitol Drugs Drug Resist. 2018 Dec;8(3):607-628. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpddr.2018.10.003. Epub 2018 Oct 30.
Many anthelmintic drugs used to treat parasitic nematode infections target proteins that regulate electrical activity of neurons and muscles: ion channels (ICs) and neurotransmitter receptors (NTRs). Perturbation of IC/NTR function disrupts worm behavior and can lead to paralysis, starvation, immune attack and expulsion. Limitations of current anthelmintics include a limited spectrum of activity across species and the threat of drug resistance, highlighting the need for new drugs for human and veterinary medicine. Although ICs/NTRs are valuable anthelmintic targets, electrophysiological recordings are not commonly included in drug development pipelines. We designed a medium-throughput platform for recording electropharyngeograms (EPGs)-the electrical signals emitted by muscles and neurons of the pharynx during pharyngeal pumping (feeding)-in Caenorhabditis elegans and parasitic nematodes. The current study in C. elegans expands previous work in several ways. Detecting anthelmintic bioactivity in drugs, compounds or natural products requires robust, sustained pharyngeal pumping under baseline conditions. We generated concentration-response curves for stimulating pumping by perfusing 8-channel microfluidic devices (chips) with the neuromodulator serotonin, or with E. coli bacteria (C. elegans' food in the laboratory). Worm orientation in the chip (head-first vs. tail-first) affected the response to E. coli but not to serotonin. Using a panel of anthelmintics-ivermectin, levamisole and piperazine-targeting different ICs/NTRs, we determined the effects of concentration and treatment duration on EPG activity, and successfully distinguished control (N2) and drug-resistant worms (avr-14; avr-15; glc-1, unc-38 and unc-49). EPG recordings detected anthelmintic activity of drugs that target ICs/NTRs located in the pharynx as well as at extra-pharyngeal sites. A bus-8 mutant with enhanced permeability was more sensitive than controls to drug treatment. These results provide a useful framework for investigators who would like to more easily incorporate electrophysiology as a routine component of their anthelmintic research workflow.
离子通道(ICs)和神经递质受体(NTRs)。IC/NTR 功能的紊乱会破坏蠕虫的行为,并导致瘫痪、饥饿、免疫攻击和驱逐。当前驱虫药物的局限性包括在物种间活性范围有限和药物耐药性的威胁,这凸显了人类和兽医医学中新药物的需求。尽管 ICs/NTRs 是有价值的驱虫靶点,但电生理学记录通常不包含在药物开发管道中。我们设计了一个高通量平台,用于记录电咽图(EPGs)-在咽泵(进食)期间肌肉和神经元发出的电信号-在秀丽隐杆线虫和寄生线虫中。本研究在秀丽隐杆线虫中以几种方式扩展了以前的工作。在药物、化合物或天然产物中检测驱虫生物活性需要在基线条件下进行稳健、持续的咽泵。我们生成了浓度反应曲线,用于通过用神经调质血清素或大肠杆菌细菌(实验室中秀丽隐杆线虫的食物)灌注 8 通道微流控装置(芯片)来刺激泵送。芯片中蠕虫的方向(头先还是尾先)影响对大肠杆菌的反应,但不影响对血清素的反应。使用一组针对不同 ICs/NTRs 的驱虫药-伊维菌素、左旋咪唑和哌嗪,我们确定了浓度和处理持续时间对 EPG 活性的影响,并成功区分了对照(N2)和耐药虫(avr-14;avr-15;glc-1、unc-38 和 unc-49)。EPG 记录检测到针对位于咽和咽外部位的 ICs/NTRs 的驱虫药物的活性。具有增强通透性的 bus-8 突变体对药物处理比对照更敏感。这些结果为希望更轻松地将电生理学作为其驱虫研究工作流程常规组成部分的研究人员提供了有用的框架。