4.8 Article

Extrasynaptic signaling enables an asymmetric juvenile motor circuit to produce symmetric undulation

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 21, Pages 4631-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.09.002

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Human Frontier Science Program Organization
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Foundation
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  4. National Institute of Health
  5. [RGP0051/2014]
  6. [154274]
  7. [32020103007]
  8. [R35 GM134970]
  9. [R01 NS093588]

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In C. elegans, the motor circuit of juvenile stage generates adult-like bending waves with dorsal-ventral symmetry, despite having asymmetric wiring between motor neurons and muscles. This is achieved through the coordination between excitatory and inhibitory motor neurons for dorsal muscle contraction and ventral muscle relaxation, respectively.
In many animals, there is a direct correspondence between the motor patterns that drive locomotion and the motor neuron innervation. For example, the adult C. elegans moves with symmetric and alternating dorsal -ventral bending waves arising from symmetric motor neuron input onto the dorsal and ventral muscles. In contrast to the adult, the C. elegans motor circuit at the juvenile larval stage has asymmetric wiring between motor neurons and muscles but still generates adult-like bending waves with dorsal-ventral symmetry. We show that in the juvenile circuit, wiring between excitatory and inhibitory motor neurons coordinates the contraction of dorsal muscles with relaxation of ventral muscles, producing dorsal bends. However, ventral bending is not driven by analogous wiring. Instead, ventral muscles are excited uniformly by premotor inter -neurons through extrasynaptic signaling. Ventral bends occur in anti-phasic entrainment to activity of the same motor neurons that drive dorsal bends. During maturation, the juvenile motor circuit is replaced by two motor subcircuits that separately drive dorsal and ventral bending. Modeling reveals that the juvenile's immature motor circuit is an adequate solution to generate adult-like dorsal-ventral bending before the an-imal matures. Developmental rewiring between functionally degenerate circuit solutions, which both generate symmetric bending patterns, minimizes behavioral disruption across maturation.

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