RRC ID 51551
著者 Williams PDE, Zahratka JA, Rodenbeck M, Wanamaker J, Linzie H, Bamber BA.
タイトル Serotonin Disinhibits a Caenorhabditis elegans Sensory Neuron by Suppressing Ca2+-Dependent Negative Feedback.
ジャーナル J Neurosci
Abstract Neuromodulators, such as serotonin (5-HT), alter neuronal excitability and synaptic strengths, and define different behavioral states. Neuromodulator-dependent changes in neuronal activity patterns are frequently measured using calcium reporters because calcium imaging can easily be performed on intact functioning nervous systems. With only 302 neurons, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans provides a relatively simple, yet powerful, system to understand neuromodulation at the level of individual neurons. C. elegans hermaphrodites are repelled by 1-octanol, and the initiation of these aversive responses is potentiated by 5-HT. 5-HT acts on the ASH polymodal nociceptors that sense the 1-octanol stimulus. Surprisingly, 5-HT suppresses ASH Ca2+ transients while simultaneously potentiating 1-octanol-dependent ASH depolarization. Here we further explore this seemingly inverse relationship. Our results show the following (1) 5-HT acts downstream of depolarization, through Gαq-mediated signaling and calcineurin, to inhibit L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channels; (2) the 1-octanol-evoked Ca2+ transients in ASHs inhibit depolarization; and (3) the Ca2+-activated K+ channel, SLO-1, acts downstream of 5-HT and is a critical regulator of ASH response dynamics. These findings define a Ca2+-dependent inhibitory feedback loop that can be modulated by 5-HT to increase neuronal excitability and regulate behavior, and highlight the possibility that neuromodulator-induced changes in the amplitudes of Ca2+ transients do not necessarily predict corresponding changes in depolarization.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Neuromodulators, such as 5-HT, modify behavior by regulating excitability and synaptic efficiency in neurons. Neuromodulation is often studied using Ca2+ imaging, whereby neuromodulator-dependent changes in neuronal activity levels can be detected in intact, functioning circuits. Here we show that 5-HT reduces the amplitude of depolarization-dependent Ca2+ transients in a C. elegans nociceptive neuron, through Gαq signaling and calcineurin but that Ca2+ itself inhibits depolarization, likely through Ca2+-activated K+ channels. The net effect of 5-HT, therefore, is to increase neuronal excitability through disinhibition. These results establish a novel 5-HT signal transduction pathway, and demonstrate that neuromodulators can change Ca2+ signals and depolarization amplitudes in opposite directions, simultaneously, within a single neuron.
巻・号 38(8)
ページ 2069-2080
公開日 2018-2-21
DOI 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1908-17.2018
PII JNEUROSCI.1908-17.2018
PMID 29358363
PMC PMC5824741
MeSH Animals Caenorhabditis elegans Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins / metabolism Calcium / metabolism Calcium Signaling / physiology* Feedback, Physiological / physiology Nervous System Physiological Phenomena* Sensory Receptor Cells / metabolism* Serotonin / metabolism*
IF 6.074
引用数 3
リソース情報
線虫 tm2654