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Difference in Intestine Content of When Fed on Non-Pathogenic or Pathogenic Bacteria. | LitMetric

Difference in Intestine Content of When Fed on Non-Pathogenic or Pathogenic Bacteria.

Micromachines (Basel)

Laboratory of Microsystems, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.

Published: July 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how different types of bacteria affect digestion and accumulation in adult worms, specifically comparing non-pathogenic and pathogenic strains over the first four days of adulthood.
  • Worms were imaged using advanced microscopy to visualize the bacteria in their intestines, leading to the creation of detailed 3D models of bacterial presence.
  • Results showed two distinct patterns of bacterial fluorescence: intact bacteria in worms fed the non-pathogenic strain and both intact and disrupted bacteria in those fed the pathogenic strain, with an overall increase in bacterial load with age, especially for the pathogenic-fed worms.

Article Abstract

We investigated the bacterial food digestion and accumulation in wild-type adult () worms that have fed on either non-pathogenic RFP-expressing () OP50 or pathogenic-RFP-expressing () PAO1 during the first 4 days of adulthood. Once the worms had completed their planned feeding cycles, they were loaded on microfluidic chips, where they were fixed to allow high-resolution z-stack fluorescence imaging of their intestines utilizing a Spinning Disk Confocal Microscope (SDCM) equipped with a high-resolution oil-immersion objective (60×). IMARIS software was used to visualize and analyze the obtained images, resulting in the production of three-dimensional constructs of the intestinal bacterial load. We discovered two distinct patterns for the bacteria-derived fluorescence signal in the intestine: (i) individual fluorescent spots, originating from intact bacteria, were present in the fluorescent -OP50-fed worms, and (ii) individual fluorescent spots (originating from intact bacteria) were dispersed in large regions of diffuse fluorescence (RDF), originating from disrupted bacteria, in fluorescent -PAO1-fed worms. We performed a semi-automated single-worm-resolution quantitative analysis of the intestinal bacterial load, which showed that the intestinal bacterial load generally increases with age of the worms, but more rapidly for the fluorescent -PAO1-fed worms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10384281PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi14071386DOI Listing

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