AI Article Synopsis

  • Neuropeptides play a key role in regulating behavior and physiology, allowing a few neurons to control various processes.
  • Researchers generated and screened 21 mutants of neuropeptide receptors in C. elegans to understand their involvement in touch-evoked escape responses and identified six receptors linked to this behavior.
  • The study shows that the receptor FRPR-14 interacts with different interneurons to drive specific behaviors, and highlights how variations in neuropeptide receptor expression can lead to differences in behavior across related species.

Article Abstract

Neuropeptides are evolutionarily conserved modulators of many aspects of animal behavior and physiology, and expand the repertoire of processes that can be controlled by a limited number of neurons. Deciphering the neuropeptidergic codes that govern distinct processes requires systematic functional analyses of neuropeptides and their cognate receptors. Even in well-studied model organisms like Caenorhabditis elegans, however, such efforts have been precluded by a lack of mutant reagents. Here, we generated and screened 21 C. elegans neuropeptide G-protein coupled receptor mutants with no pre-existing reagents for the touch-evoked escape response, and implicated six receptors expressed in diverse neuron classes representing multiple circuit levels in this behavior. We further characterized the mutant with the most severe phenotype, frpr-14, which was defective in multiple behavioral paradigms. We leveraged this range of phenotypes to reveal that FRPR-14 modulation of different precommand interneuron classes, AVH and AIB, can drive distinct behavioral subsets, demonstrating cellular context-dependent roles for FRPR-14 signaling. We then show that Caenorhabditis briggsae CBR-FRPR-14 modulates an AVH-like interneuron pair to regulate the same behaviors as C. elegans but to a smaller extent. Our results also suggest that differences in touch-evoked escape circuit architecture between closely related species results from changes in neuropeptide receptor expression pattern, as opposed to ligand-receptor pairing. This study provides insights into the principles utilized by a compact, multiplexed nervous system to generate intraspecific behavioral complexity and interspecific variation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8733633PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/genetics/iyab198DOI Listing

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