RRC ID 51523
Author Stern S, Kirst C, Bargmann CI.
Title Neuromodulatory Control of Long-Term Behavioral Patterns and Individuality across Development.
Journal Cell
Abstract Animals generate complex patterns of behavior across development that may be shared or unique to individuals. Here, we examine the contributions of developmental programs and individual variation to behavior by monitoring single Caenorhabditis elegans nematodes over their complete developmental trajectories and quantifying their behavior at high spatiotemporal resolution. These measurements reveal reproducible trajectories of spontaneous foraging behaviors that are stereotyped within and between developmental stages. Dopamine, serotonin, the neuropeptide receptor NPR-1, and the TGF-β peptide DAF-7 each have stage-specific effects on behavioral trajectories, implying the existence of a modular temporal program controlled by neuromodulators. In addition, a fraction of individuals within isogenic populations raised in controlled environments have consistent, non-genetic behavioral biases that persist across development. Several neuromodulatory systems increase or decrease the degree of non-genetic individuality to shape sustained patterns of behavior across the population.
Volume 171(7)
Pages 1649-1662.e10
Published 2017-12-14
DOI 10.1016/j.cell.2017.10.041
PII S0092-8674(17)31267-9
PMID 29198526
MeSH Animals Behavior, Animal Biological Variation, Individual* Caenorhabditis elegans / growth & development* Caenorhabditis elegans / physiology* Dopamine / metabolism Gene Expression Regulation Larva / physiology Neuroimaging / instrumentation Neuroimaging / methods Neuropeptides / genetics Neuropeptides / metabolism* Receptors, Serotonin / genetics Receptors, Serotonin / metabolism
IF 38.637
Times Cited 21
Resource
C.elegans tm1325 tm2647