$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$
$$\longleftharp{xx}$$,
$$\longrightharp{xx}$$,
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) is increasingly utilized as a model system to uncover the biological and molecular processes involved in human disease. An adult nematode has a body length of just over 1 mm, and can produce a large brood of up to 300 eggs1. After hatching, C. elegans only require 3-4 days to reach adulthood, and live for around 2 to 3 weeks2. Due to its ease of culturing, C. elegans is currently one of the most sought-after in vivo animal models for conducting cost-effective, rapid drug screening to identify therapeutics for human diseases. Additionally, its genetic conservation, well defined behavioral paradigms, transparent body for fluorescence or light microscopy, and ease of genetic manipulation make the study of cellular and molecular consequences of genetic mutations readily achieveable3. The C. elegans genome shares approximately 60-80% orthology with human genes, and about 40% of those genes are known to be disease-related. Some of human diseases that have been modelled and studied in C. elegans include neurodegenerative disorders (Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease), muscle-associated diseases (Duchenne muscular dystrophy), and metabolic diseases (hyperglycemia)2,4. In most human disorders, disease-induced cellular and organelle localization and morphological changes occur, which can readily be evaluated in the nematode model.
Fluorescent markers have been widely used to label tissues and organelles for dynamic visualization under the microscope. However, in C. elegans, conventional methods that assess morphological irregularities due to genetic mutations have largely relied on visual descriptions. While qualitative assessments can cover wider ranges of phenotypic descriptions (synaptic morphology, GFP clumping, specific axonal shape, muscle fiber thickness, etc.) and provide a bird’s eye view of the morphological changes, they are less well suited for comparing small variations across different groups. Furthermore, qualitative assessments are based on visual, subjective evaluation, which may lead to over- or under-estimations of morphological abnormalities. Finally, qualitative observations can also vary greatly between individuals, creating difficulties with data replication.
In recent years, a number of user-friendly, readily available computational algorithms that can quantitatively analyse images have been developed. However, the utilization of such image analysis software for some morphological studies, especially in relation to body wall muscles and mitochondria, in C. elegans research has lagged behind. To improve underlying structural analysis in C. elegans, some of the readily available, open-source image analysis software were trialed to quantitatively compare the effects of genetic mutations on muscle mitochondria, body wall muscle and synaptic morphology. These experimental procedures outline in detail how these programs (Fiji, ilastik, CellProfiler, SQUASSH) can be used to evaluate changes in synaptic size and synaptic protein localization, body wall muscle area and fiber length, and mitochondrial size and circularity as a result of genetic mutations in the nematode.