Ca- and diacylglycerol (DAG)-activated protein kinase C (cPKC) promotes learning and behavioral plasticity. However, knowledge of regulation and exact functions of cPKCs that affect behavior is limited. We show that PKC-2, a cPKC, is essential for a complex behavior, thermotaxis. memorizes a nutrient-associated cultivation temperature ( ) and migrates along the within a 17 to 25°C gradient. gene disruption abrogated thermotaxis; a PKC-2 transgene, driven by endogenous promoters, restored thermotaxis behavior in animals. Cell-specific manipulation of PKC-2 activity revealed that thermotaxis is controlled by cooperative PKC-2-mediated signaling in both AFD sensory neurons and intestinal cells. Cold-directed migration (cryophilic drive) precedes tracking during thermotaxis. Analysis of temperature-directed behaviors elicited by persistent PKC-2 activation or inhibition in AFD (or intestine) disclosed that PKC-2 regulates initiation and duration of cryophilic drive. In AFD neurons, PKC-2 is a Ca sensor and signal amplifier that operates downstream from cyclic GMP-gated cation channels and distal guanylate cyclases. UNC-18, which regulates neurotransmitter and neuropeptide release from synaptic vesicles, is a critical PKC-2 effector in AFD. UNC-18 variants, created by mutating Ser or Ser, disrupt thermotaxis and suppress PKC-2-dependent cryophilic migration.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5599713PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/MCB.00192-17DOI Listing

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