4.4 Article

Heat Avoidance Is Regulated by Transient Receptor Potential (TRP) Channels and a Neuropeptide Signaling Pathway in Caenorhabditis elegans

Journal

GENETICS
Volume 188, Issue 1, Pages 91-U150

Publisher

GENETICS SOC AM
DOI: 10.1534/genetics.111.127100

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Center for Research Resources (NCRR)
  2. NIH [NS061147, GM66269]
  3. National Science Foundation [NSF0725079]
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation [PBGE33-121191]
  5. Stanford Faculty of Medicine
  6. Human Frontiers Science Program
  7. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [PBGE33-121191] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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The ability to avoid noxious extremes of hot and cold is critical for survival and depends on thermal nociception. The TRPV subset of transient receptor potential (TRP) channels is heat activated and proposed to be responsible for heat detection in vertebrates and fruit flies. To gain insight into the genetic and neural basis of thermal nociception, we developed assays that quantify noxious heat avoidance in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and used them to investigate the genetic basis of this behavior. First, we screened mutants for 18 TRP channel genes (including all TRPV orthologs) and found only minor defects in heat avoidance in single and selected double and triple mutants, indicating that other genes are involved. Next, we compared two wild isolates of C. elegans that diverge in their threshold for heat avoidance and linked this phenotypic variation to a polymorphism in the neuropeptide receptor gene npr-1. Further analysis revealed that loss of either the NPR-1 receptor or its ligand, FLP-21, increases the threshold for heat avoidance. Cell-specific rescue of npr-1 implicates the interneuron RMG in the circuit regulating heat avoidance. This neuropeptide signaling pathway operates independently of the TRPV genes, osm-9 and ocr-2, since mutants lacking npr-1 and both TRPV channels had more severe defects in heat avoidance than mutants lacking only npr-1 or both osm-9 and ocr-2. Our results show that TRPV channels and the FLP-21/NPR-1 neuropeptide signaling pathway determine the threshold for heat avoidance in C. elegans.

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