Litcius/Paper detail

The molecular and neural regulation of ultraviolet light phototaxis and its food-associated learning behavioral plasticity in C. elegans

Kazuki Ozawa, Yoichi Shinkai, Koichiro Kako, Akiyoshi Fukamizu, Motomichi Doi

2021Neuroscience Letters10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ultraviolet light is quite toxic to all the animals and evoke the avoidance behavior of UV. The soil nematode Caenorhabditis elegans senses UV and is known to avoid UV by using four sensory neurons. However, it is not clear what signaling molecules act for UV avoidance in the neuronal pathway constituted of four sensory neurons. In addition, it is not clear whether this harmful environmental signal can be associated with other benefit signals such as food. In this study, by using newly developed assay system, we found that C. elegans can associate UV and food and changes behavioral strategy against harmful UV signal. This is the first indication that C. elegans shows associate learning with UV and food. Using our assay system, we also found that glutamate is used as a transmitter in both the UV avoidance and UV associate learning neural circuits. However, one sensory neuron showed a significant role for associative learning, compared to a complimentary role in four sensory neurons for direct associative learning, and different sets of glutamate receptors seemed to be acting for UV avoidance and UV associate learning. These findings suggest that a distinct neuronal network is used for UV learning compared to that for direct avoidance behavior of UV.

Topics & Concepts

Sensory systemCaenorhabditis elegansAssociative learningNeuroscienceGlutamate receptorPhototaxisBiologySensory processingBiological neural networkSensory neuronPsychologyReceptorBiochemistryBotanyGeneGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model OrganismsCircadian rhythm and melatoninSpaceflight effects on biology