RRC ID 84163
Author Inberg S, Iosilevskii Y, Calatayud-Sanchez A, Setty H, Oren-Suissa M, Krieg M, Podbilewicz B.
Title Sensory experience controls dendritic structure and behavior by distinct pathways involving degenerins.
Journal Elife
Abstract Dendrites are crucial for receiving information into neurons. Sensory experience affects the structure of these tree-like neurites, which, it is assumed, modifies neuronal function, yet the evidence is scarce, and the mechanisms are unknown. To study whether sensory experience affects dendritic morphology, we use the Caenorhabditis elegans' arborized nociceptor PVD neurons, under natural mechanical stimulation induced by physical contacts between individuals. We found that mechanosensory signals induced by conspecifics and by glass beads affect the dendritic structure of the PVD. Moreover, developmentally isolated animals show a decrease in their ability to respond to harsh touch. The structural and behavioral plasticity following sensory deprivation are functionally independent of each other and are mediated by an array of evolutionarily conserved mechanosensory amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channels (degenerins). Calcium imaging of the PVD neurons in a micromechanical device revealed that controlled mechanical stimulation of the body wall produces similar calcium dynamics in both isolated and crowded animals. Our genetic results, supported by optogenetic, behavioral, and pharmacological evidence, suggest an activity-dependent homeostatic mechanism for dendritic structural plasticity, that in parallel controls escape response to noxious mechanosensory stimuli.
Volume 14
Published 2025-1-10
DOI 10.7554/eLife.83973
PII 83973
PMID 39791349
PMC PMC11756856
MeSH Animals Behavior, Animal* Caenorhabditis elegans* / physiology Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins* / metabolism Calcium / metabolism Dendrites* / metabolism Dendrites* / physiology Epithelial Sodium Channels* / metabolism Mechanotransduction, Cellular Neuronal Plasticity
Resource
C.elegans tm1552