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Bidirectional thermotaxis in Caenorhabditis elegans is mediated by distinct sensorimotor strategies driven by the AFD thermosensory neurons

The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans navigates toward a preferred temperature setpoint (T ₛ) determined by long-term temperature exposure. During thermotaxis, the worm migrates down temperature gradients at temperatures above T ₛ (negative thermotaxis) and performs isothermal tracking near T ₛ. Under...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2014-02, Vol.111 (7), p.2776-2781
Main Authors: Luo, Linjiao, Cook, Nathan, Venkatachalam, Vivek, Martinez-Velazquez, Luis A., Zhang, Xiaodong, Calvo, Ana C., Hawk, Josh, MacInnis, Bronwyn L., Frank, Michelle, Ng, Jia Hong Ray, Klein, Mason, Gershow, Marc, Hammarlund, Marc, Goodman, Miriam B., Colón-Ramos, Daniel A., Zhang, Yun, Samuel, Aravinthan D. T.
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Language:English
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Summary:The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans navigates toward a preferred temperature setpoint (T ₛ) determined by long-term temperature exposure. During thermotaxis, the worm migrates down temperature gradients at temperatures above T ₛ (negative thermotaxis) and performs isothermal tracking near T ₛ. Under some conditions, the worm migrates up temperature gradients below T ₛ (positive thermotaxis). Here, we analyze positive and negative thermotaxis toward T ₛ to study the role of specific neurons that have been proposed to be involved in thermotaxis using genetic ablation, behavioral tracking, and calcium imaging. We find differences in the strategies for positive and negative thermotaxis. Negative thermotaxis is achieved through biasing the frequency of reorientation maneuvers (turns and reversal turns) and biasing the direction of reorientation maneuvers toward colder temperatures. Positive thermotaxis, in contrast, biases only the direction of reorientation maneuvers toward warmer temperatures. We find that the AFD thermosensory neuron drives both positive and negative thermotaxis. The AIY interneuron, which is postsynaptic to AFD, may mediate the switch from negative to positive thermotaxis below T ₛ. We propose that multiple thermotactic behaviors, each defined by a distinct set of sensorimotor transformations, emanate from the AFD thermosensory neurons. AFD learns and stores the memory of preferred temperatures, detects temperature gradients, and drives the appropriate thermotactic behavior in each temperature regime by the flexible use of downstream circuits.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1315205111