Insulin-like signaling and the neural circuit for integrative behavior in <i>C. elegans</i>

Eiji Kodama(Nagoya University), Atsushi Kuhara(Nagoya University), Akiko Mohri‐Shiomi(Nagoya University), Koutarou D. Kimura(Nagoya University), Masatoshi Okumura(Nagoya University), Masahiro Tomioka(The University of Tokyo), Yuichi Iino(The University of Tokyo), Ikue Mori(Nagoya University Hospital)
Genes & Development
November 1, 2006
Cited by 159Open Access
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Abstract

Caenorhabditis elegans exhibits a food-associated behavior that is modulated by the past cultivation temperature. Mutations in INS-1, the homolog of human insulin, caused the defect in this integrative behavior. Mutations in DAF-2/insulin receptor and AGE-1/phosphatidylinositol 3 (PI-3)-kinase partially suppressed the defect of ins-1 mutants, and a mutation in DAF-16, a forkhead-type transcriptional factor, caused a weak defect. In addition, mutations in the secretory protein HEN-1 showed synergistic effects with INS-1. Expression of AGE-1 in any of the three interneurons, AIY, AIZ, or RIA, rescued the defect characteristic of age-1 mutants. Calcium imaging revealed that starvation induced INS-1-mediated down-regulation of AIZ activity. Our results suggest that INS-1, in cooperation with HEN-1, antagonizes the DAF-2 insulin-like signaling pathway to modulate interneuron activity required for food-associated integrative behavior.


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