RRC ID 46213
Author Topper SM, Aguilar SC, Topper VY, Elbel E, Pierce-Shimomura JT.
Title Alcohol disinhibition of behaviors in C. elegans.
Journal PLoS One
Abstract Alcohol has a wide variety of effects on physiology and behavior. One of the most well-recognized behavioral effects is disinhibition, where behaviors that are normally suppressed are displayed following intoxication. A large body of evidence has shown that alcohol-induced disinhibition in humans affects attention, verbal, sexual, and locomotor behaviors. Similar behavioral disinhibition is also seen in many animal models of ethanol response, from invertebrates to mammals and primates. Here we describe several examples of disinhibition in the nematode C. elegans. The nematode displays distinct behavioral states associated with locomotion (crawling on land and swimming in water) that are mediated by dopamine. On land, animals crawl and feed freely, but these behaviors are inhibited in water. We found that additional behaviors, including a variety of escape responses are also inhibited in water. Whereas alcohol non-specifically impaired locomotion, feeding, and escape responses in worms on land, alcohol specifically disinhibited these behaviors in worms immersed in water. Loss of dopamine signaling relieved disinhibition of feeding behavior, while loss of the D1-like dopamine receptor DOP-4 impaired the ethanol-induced disinhibition of crawling. The powerful genetics and simple nervous system of C. elegans may help uncover conserved molecular mechanisms that underlie alcohol-induced disinhibition of behaviors in higher animals.
Volume 9(3)
Pages e92965
Published 2014-1-1
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0092965
PII PONE-D-13-45655
PMID 24681782
PMC PMC3969370
MeSH Animals Behavior, Animal / drug effects* Caenorhabditis elegans / drug effects* Dopamine / pharmacology Ethanol / pharmacology* Locomotion / drug effects Nervous System / drug effects Nervous System Physiological Phenomena / drug effects Signal Transduction / drug effects Swimming / physiology
IF 2.74
Times Cited 15
WOS Category NEUROSCIENCES
Resource
C.elegans tm1392