Natural |
M. nematophilum |
Swelling of tail region (Dar); nonlethal |
Induces ERK MAPK response; infection limited to rectal area |
26, 52, 54
|
D. coniospora |
Fungal infection: hyphae penetrate entire worm |
Induces NLP and CNC response genes; difficult to grow or control infectious dose |
13, 31, 59, 61, 83
|
N. parisii |
Intracellular parasite |
Horizontal transfer of infection; unique immune response; cannot be cultured in vitro
|
78 |
Nodavirus |
Intestinal structure disrupted; life span unchanged |
Induces natural RNAi response; horizontally transmitted |
18 |
Human (bacterial) |
P. aeruginosa |
Medium-dependent fast and slow killing, which are toxin and infection based, respectively |
Induces p38 MAPK response; killing mechanism is strain dependent |
15, 36, 42, 71
|
S. enterica |
Persistent bacterial infection |
Primarily an extracellular infection in C. elegans, unlike in mammals |
3, 38
|
S. marcescens |
Grossly distended intestine; 6-day survival |
Triggers inducible immune response; may be a natural host-pathogen interaction |
37, 43, 65
|
E. coli |
Nonpathogenic food source; pathogenic strains exhibit fast and slow killing |
Results in a behavioral conditioning response; type III secretion system not required (unlike mammalian host) |
7, 8, 12, 47
|
S. aureus |
Intact bacteria overwhelm animal; not persistent until infection threshold reached |
bar-1 and egl-5 response is key; conservation of virulence factors between C. elegans and mammals |
22, 28, 29, 68
|
Human (fungal) |
C. albicans |
Persistent lethal infection |
Coinfection model particularly informative |
9, 55, 57, 70
|
C. neoformans |
Rapid infection, accumulation of yeast; not persistent |
Mechanism of pathogenesis unclear; does not disseminate in C. elegans (unlike mammalian host) |
51, 72, 79
|