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The C. elegans male exercises directional control during mating through cholinergic regulation of sex-shared command interneurons.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Mating behaviors in simple invertebrate model organisms represent tractable paradigms for understanding the neural bases of sex-specific behaviors, decision-making and sensorimotor integration. However, there are few examples where such neural circuits have been defined at high resolution or interrogated.

Methodology/principal findings

Here we exploit the simplicity of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to define the neural circuits underlying the male's decision to initiate mating in response to contact with a mate. Mate contact is sensed by male-specific sensilla of the tail, the rays, which subsequently induce and guide a contact-based search of the hermaphrodite's surface for the vulva (the vulva search). Atypically, search locomotion has a backward directional bias so its implementation requires overcoming an intrinsic bias for forward movement, set by activity of the sex-shared locomotory system. Using optogenetics, cell-specific ablation- and mutant behavioral analyses, we show that the male makes this shift by manipulating the activity of command cells within this sex-shared locomotory system. The rays control the command interneurons through the male-specific, decision-making interneuron PVY and its auxiliary cell PVX. Unlike many sex-shared pathways, PVY/PVX regulate the command cells via cholinergic, rather than glutamatergic transmission, a feature that likely contributes to response specificity and coordinates directional movement with other cholinergic-dependent motor behaviors of the mating sequence. PVY/PVX preferentially activate the backward, and not forward, command cells because of a bias in synaptic inputs and the distribution of key cholinergic receptors (encoded by the genes acr-18, acr-16 and unc-29) in favor of the backward command cells.

Conclusion/significance

Our interrogation of male neural circuits reveals that a sex-specific response to the opposite sex is conferred by a male-specific pathway that renders subordinate, sex-shared motor programs responsive to mate cues. Circuit modifications of these types may make prominent contributions to natural variations in behavior that ultimately bring about speciation.

SUBMITTER: Sherlekar AL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3618225 | biostudies-literature | 2013

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

The C. elegans male exercises directional control during mating through cholinergic regulation of sex-shared command interneurons.

Sherlekar Amrita L AL   Janssen Abbey A   Siehr Meagan S MS   Koo Pamela K PK   Caflisch Laura L   Boggess May M   Lints Robyn R  

PloS one 20130405 4


<h4>Background</h4>Mating behaviors in simple invertebrate model organisms represent tractable paradigms for understanding the neural bases of sex-specific behaviors, decision-making and sensorimotor integration. However, there are few examples where such neural circuits have been defined at high resolution or interrogated.<h4>Methodology/principal findings</h4>Here we exploit the simplicity of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to define the neural circuits underlying the male's decision to in  ...[more]

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