Skip navigation
  • Home
  • Browse
    • Communities
      & Collections
    • Browse Items by:
    • Publication Date
    • Author
    • Title
    • Subject
    • Department
  • Sign on to:
    • My MacSphere
    • Receive email
      updates
    • Edit Profile


McMaster University Home Page
  1. MacSphere
  2. Open Access Dissertations and Theses Community
  3. Open Access Dissertations and Theses
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/30289
Title: Development of a high-throughput behavioural assay in Caenorhabditis elegans
Authors: Lluka, Telmah
Advisor: Brown, Eric
Stokes, Jonathan
Department: Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences
Publication Date: 2024
Abstract: The global burden of neurological and psychiatric disorders on healthcare and long-term care is large and steadily increasing. Reductionist target-based screening and synthetic chemistry efforts are failing to introduce new drugs into the clinic—a reflection of their failure to capture the complexities of human neurobiology. Medicines derived from natural products have unmatched structural and functional diversity, refined over millions of years of evolutionary trial-and-error. While fungi have seen therapeutic use across human history in traditional medicines, in modern drug discovery these microbes are relatively underexplored. We have assembled a fractionated fungal extract library, with fungi foraged largely from a remote and temperate rainforest off the coast of British Columbia. I present the development of a high-throughput behavioural assay with the model organism C. elegans that will be used to screen this library for the purposes of novel neuroactive drug discovery. I used a custom-designed instrument, the Kastl-HighRes imaging system, to enable the simultaneous capture of high-resolution videos of C. elegans N2 within a standard microwell plate. Behavioural responses were quantified using Tierpsy Tracker, an open-source software that tracks individual and multi-worm behavioural phenotypes such as swimming dynamics, morphology, and trajectory. In this study, I investigate the reproducibility of the data collected using my protocol and I validate my assay by confirming published behavioural phenotypes of three chemicals. I also demonstrate that my assay is sensitive enough to identify neuroactive fungal extracts by characterizing the behavioural phenotype of an uncharacterized fungal metabolite. 
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/30289
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Lluka_Telmah_finalsubmission202409_MSc.pdf
Embargoed until: 2025-09-15
15.74 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Show full item record Statistics


Items in MacSphere are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Sherman Centre for Digital Scholarship     McMaster University Libraries
©2022 McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4L8 | 905-525-9140 | Contact Us | Terms of Use & Privacy Policy | Feedback

Report Accessibility Issue