iScience
Volume 23, Issue 10, 23 October 2020, 101588
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Article
Signal Decoding for Glutamate Modulating Egg Laying Oppositely in Caenorhabditis elegans under Varied Environmental Conditions

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2020.101588Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Short-term exposure of CuSO4 evokes hyperactive egg laying

  • ASHs inhibit HSNs and egg laying via GLR-5 receptor under no Cu2+ treatment

  • AIA interneurons suppress HSNs and thus egg laying through ACR-14 signaling

  • Under noxious Cu2+ treatment, ASHs and ADLs suppress AIAs and augment egg laying

Summary

Animals' ability to sense environmental cues and to integrate this information to control fecundity is vital for continuing the species lineage. In this study, we observed that the sensory neurons Amphid neuron (ASHs and ADLs) differentially regulate egg-laying behavior in Caenorhabditis elegans under varied environmental conditions via distinct neuronal circuits. Under standard culture conditions, ASHs tonically release a small amount of glutamate and inhibit Hermaphrodite specific motor neuron (HSN) activities and egg laying via a highly sensitive Glutamate receptor (GLR)-5 receptor. In contrast, under Cu2+ stimulation, ASHs and ADLs may release a large amount of glutamate and inhibit Amphid interneuron (AIA) interneurons via low-sensitivity Glutamate-gated chloride channel (GLC)-3 receptor, thus removing the inhibitory roles of AIAs on HSN activity and egg laying. However, directly measuring the amount of glutamate released by sensory neurons under different conditions and assaying the binding kinetics of receptors with the neurotransmitter are still required to support this study directly.

Subject Areas

Behavioral Neuroscience
Biological Sciences
Environmental Science

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These authors contributed equally

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