The functions of serotonin have been assigned through serotonin-receptor-specific drugs and mutants; however, because a constellation of receptors remains when a single receptor subtype is inhibited, the coordinate responses to modulation of serotonin levels may be missed. Here we report the analysis of behavioural and neuroendocrine defects caused by a complete lack of serotonin signalling. Analysis of the C. elegans genome sequence showed that there is a single tryptophan hydroxylase gene (tph-1)-the key enzyme for serotonin biosynthesis. Animals bearing a tph-1 deletion mutation do not synthesize serotonin but are fully viable. The tph-1 mutant shows abnormalities in behaviour and metabolism that are normally coupled with the sensation and ingestion of food: rates of feeding and egg laying are decreased; large amounts of fat are stored; reproductive lifespan is increased; and some animals arrest at the metabolically inactive dauer stage. This metabolic dysregulation is, in part, due to downregulation of transforming growth factor-beta and insulin-like neuroendocrine signals. The action of the C. elegans serotonergic system in metabolic control is similar to mammalian serotonergic input to metabolism and obesity.
Defining a behavior that requires the function of specific neurons in the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans can allow one to screen for mutations that disrupt the specification or function of those neurons. We identified serotonin-immunoreactive neurons required for tail curling or "turning" behavior exhibited by C. elegans males during mating. Males mutant in three different genes that reduce serotonin expression, cat-1, cat-4, and bas-1, exhibited defects in turning behavior similar to those of wild-type males in which these neurons were ablated. The turning defect of cat-4 males was rescued by exogenous serotonin, consistent with the idea that their behavioral defect is caused by a lack of serotonin. While the serotonin-deficient mutants we analyzed shared certain behavioral traits, they were blocked for serotonin synthesis at different steps. Analysis of these and additional serotonin-deficient mutants may help us understand how a neuron controls the expression of a serotonergic phenotype.
Intricate patterns of overlapping HOM-C gene expression along the A/P axis have been observed in many organisms; however, the significance of these patterns in establishing the ultimate fates of individual cells is not well understood. We have examined the expression of the Caenorhabditis elegans Antennapedia homolog mab-5 and its role in specifying cell fates in the posterior of the ventral nerve cord. We find that the pattern of fates specified by mab-5 not only depends on mab-5 expression but also on post-translational interactions with the neighboring HOM-C gene 1in-39 and a second, inferred gene activity. Where mab-5 expression overlaps with 1in-39 activity, they can interact in two different ways depending on the cell type: They can either effectively neutralize one another where they are both expressed or Iin-39 can predominate over mab-5. As observed for Antennapedia in Drosophila, expression of mab-5 itself is repressed by the next most posterior HOM-C gene, egl-5. Thus, a surprising diversity in HOM-C regulatory mechanisms exists within a small set of cells even in a simple organism.
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is the natural cofactor of several enzymes widely distributed among eukaryotes, including aromatic amino acid hydroxylases (AAAHs), nitric oxide synthases (NOSs), and alkylglycerol monooxygenase (AGMO). We show here that the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, which has three AAAH genes and one AGMO gene, contains BH4 and has genes that function in BH4 synthesis and regeneration. Knockout mutants for putative BH4 synthetic enzyme genes lack the predicted enzymatic activities, synthesize no BH4, and have indistinguishable behavioral and neurotransmitter phenotypes, including serotonin and dopamine deficiency. The BH4 regeneration enzymes are not required for steady-state levels of biogenic amines, but become rate limiting in conditions of reduced BH4 synthesis. BH4-deficient mutants also have a fragile cuticle and are generally hypersensitive to exogenous agents, a phenotype that is not due to AAAH deficiency, but rather to dysfunction in the lipid metabolic enzyme AGMO, which is expressed in the epidermis. Loss of AGMO or BH4 synthesis also specifically alters the sensitivity of C. elegans to bacterial pathogens, revealing a cuticular function for AGMO-dependent lipid metabolism in host–pathogen interactions.
In most segments of the leech, a pair of Retzius (Rz) cells innervate the body wall musculature and skin; however, in the segments specialized for reproduction (midbody segments 5 and 6), these neurons innervate the reproductive tissue instead. Whereas all Rz cells have the same morphology early in embryogenesis, those in the reproductive segments [Rz(5,6)] become considerably different from their segmental homologs. Unlike standard Rz cells, Rz(5,6) do not have axons in the interganglionic connectives or in the body wall (Glover and Mason, 1986). Rz(5,6) also have significantly smaller somata and fewer branches in the ganglionic neuropil than do standard Rz cells (Jellies et al., 1987). Since these differences between Rz cells do not become apparent until after Rz(5,6) processes appear to contact the reproductive tissue primordia, interactions between Rz(5,6) processes and the reproductive tissue may determine the segmental specializations of these neurons. We have tested this possibility by ablating the reproductive tissue primordia early in embryogenesis and subsequently examining Rz(5,6) morphology. In the absence of reproductive tissue, Rz(5,6) became more like standard Rz cells: they retained axons in the interganglionic connectives, they projected into the body wall, and the density of their arborization within the neuropil increased. These results indicate that the development of some segmental specializations of Rz(5,6) involves an interaction with their unique target tissue.
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