4.4 Article

Regulation of Caenorhabditis elegans Male Mate Searching Behavior by the Nuclear Receptor DAF-12

Journal

GENETICS
Volume 180, Issue 4, Pages 2111-2122

Publisher

GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1534/genetics.108.093773

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Funding

  1. National institutes of Health

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Coordination of animal behavior with reproductive status is often achieved through elaboration Of hormones by the gonad. In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, adult males explore their environment to locate mates. Mate searching is regulated by presence of mates, nutritional status, and a signal from the gonad. Here we show that the gonadal signal acts via the nuclear receptor DAF-12, a protein known to regulate several G elegans life-history traits. DAF-12 has both activational and organizational functions to stimulate exploratory behavior Mid acts downstream Of the gonadal signal, outside of the gonad. DAF-12 acts upstream of sensory input from mating partners and physiological signals indicating nutritional status. Mate searching was rescued in germ-line ablated animals, but not if both germ line and somatic gonad were ablated, by 21 precursor of the DAF-12 ligand, dafachronic acid (DA). The results, are interpreted to suggest that the germ line produces a DA precursor that is converted to DA outside of the germ line, possibly in the somatic gonad. As it does in other pathways in Which it functions, in regulation of male mate searching behavior DAF-12 act,; at. a choice point between alternatives favoring reproduction (mate searching) vs. survival (remaining on food).

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