Study of reversal behavior in Caenorhabditis elegans
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IISERM
Abstract
Animals have different foraging strategies to find new sources of food. In
Caenorhabditis elegans, these strategies are governed by changing the frequency and
duration of the basic locomotor patterns, which include forward movement, reversals
and omega turns. Although previous work has identified the neuronal circuits that
control the worm locomotion, how the signaling across these circuits can be
modulated is only partially understood.
Here, I will first show you the function of RIG-3 an immunoglobulin superfamily
protein that is expressed in the AVA command interneuron. Mutants lacking rig-3
have an increase in reversal frequency in OFF food conditions, which alters the local
search behaviour in worms. RIG-3 functions through the glutamate receptor, GLR-1,
to maintain reversal frequency during local search. Further rig-3 mutants show
increase in GLR-1::GFP levels in the AVA command interneuron, which confers
increased glutamatergic signalling through this neuron leading to increase in reversal
frequency. These results suggest that RIG-3 plays an important role in maintaining
signalling across reversal circuits to execute appropriate local search for food in
worms.
In the second part, I will explain how the FLP-18 neuropeptide fluctuates with food
availability, which in turn modulates the reversal circuitry in C. elegans. In this study
we have found that FLP-18 modulates the reversal length through its receptors NPR-1
and NPR-4 through ASE and AVA during local search behaviour. We further
observed that the levels of FLP-18 increased after 24 hours of starvation, which
causes decrease in reversal length. Similar effect was observed in mutants lacking
functional CREB-1/CRH-1, a transcription factor that likely regulates FLP-18
expression. These results suggest that FLP-18 reduces AVA activity to limit the
reversal duration, which might facilitate the local search behaviour of worms.