Chemical detoxification of small molecules by Caenorhabditis elegans.
Author(s)
Stupp, Gregory S
Izrayelit, Yevgeniy
Ajredini, Ramadan
Schroeder, Frank C
Edison, Arthur S
Date issued
February 15, 2013
In
ACS chemical biology
Vol
8
No
2
From page
309 p.
To page
313 p.
Abstract
Caenorhabditis elegans lives in compost and decaying fruit, eats bacteria and is exposed to pathogenic microbes. We show that C. elegans is able to modify diverse microbial small-molecule toxins via both O- and N-glucosylation as well as unusual 3'-O-phosphorylation of the resulting glucosides. The resulting glucosylated derivatives have significantly reduced toxicity to C. elegans, suggesting that these chemical modifications represent a general mechanism for worms to detoxify their environments.
ISSN
1554-8937
Publication type
journal article
