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1.
PLoS Biol ; 22(7): e3002729, 2024 Jul 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39024405

ABSTRACT

Sensory neurons specialize in detecting and signaling the presence of diverse environmental stimuli. Neuronal injury or disease may undermine such signaling, diminishing the availability of crucial information. Can animals distinguish between a stimulus not being present and the inability to sense that stimulus in the first place? To address this question, we studied Caenorhabditis elegans nematode worms that lack gentle body touch sensation due to genetic mechanoreceptor dysfunction. We previously showed that worms can compensate for the loss of touch by enhancing their sense of smell, via an FLP-20 neuropeptide pathway. Here, we find that touch-deficient worms exhibit, in addition to sensory compensation, also cautious-like behavior, as if preemptively avoiding potential undetectable hazards. Intriguingly, these behavioral adjustments are abolished when the touch neurons are removed, suggesting that touch neurons are required for signaling the unavailability of touch information, in addition to their conventional role of signaling touch stimulation. Furthermore, we found that the ASE taste neurons, which similarly to the touch neurons, express the FLP-20 neuropeptide, exhibit altered FLP-20 expression levels in a touch-dependent manner, thus cooperating with the touch circuit. These results imply a novel form of neuronal signaling that enables C. elegans to distinguish between lack of touch stimulation and loss of touch sensation, producing adaptive behavioral adjustments that could overcome the inability to detect potential threats.

2.
eNeuro ; 8(2)2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33712439

ABSTRACT

The perception of our surrounding environment is an amalgamation of stimuli detected by sensory neurons. In Caenorhabditis elegans, olfaction is an essential behavior that determines various behavioral functions such as locomotion, feeding and development. Sensory olfactory cues also initiate downstream neuroendocrine signaling that controls aging, learning, development and reproduction. Innate sensory preferences toward odors (food, pathogens) and reproductive pheromones are modulated by 11 pairs of amphid chemosensory neurons in the head region of C. elegans Amongst these sensory neurons, the ASI neuron has neuroendocrine functions and secretes neuropeptides, insulin-like peptide (DAF-28) and the TGF-ß protein, DAF-7. Its expression levels are modulated by the presence of food (increased levels) and population density (decreased levels). A recent study has shown that EXP-1, an excitatory GABA receptor regulates DAF-7/TGF-ß levels and participates in DAF-7/TGF-ß-mediated behaviors such as aggregation and bordering. Here, we show that exp-1 mutants show defective responses toward AWC-sensed attractive odors in a non-autonomous manner through ASI neurons. Our dauer experiments reveal that in daf-7 mutants, ASI expressed EXP-1 and STR-2 (a G-protein-coupled receptor; GPCR) that partially maintained reproductive growth of animals. Further, studies suggest that neuronal connections between ASI and AWC neurons are allowed at least partially through ASI secreted DAF-7 or through alternate TGF- ß pathway/s regulated by EXP-1 and STR-2. Together, our behavioral, genetic and imaging experiments propose that EXP-1 and STR-2 integrate food cues and allow the animals to display DAF-7/TGF-ß neuroendocrine dependent or independent behavioral responses contributing to chemosensensory and developmental plasticity.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins , Caenorhabditis elegans , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/genetics , Mutation , Sensory Receptor Cells , Signal Transduction , Transforming Growth Factor beta/genetics
3.
Biophys J ; 118(10): 2489-2501, 2020 05 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32348721

ABSTRACT

Despite achieving considerable success in reducing the number of fatalities due to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, emergence of resistance against the reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitor drugs remains one of the biggest challenges of the human immunodeficiency virus antiretroviral therapy (ART). Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) form a large class of drugs and a crucial component of ART. In NNRTIs, even a single resistance mutation is known to make the drugs completely ineffective. Additionally, several inhibitor-bound RTs with single resistance mutations do not exhibit any significant variations in their three-dimensional structures compared with the inhibitor-bound RT but completely nullify their inhibitory functions. This makes understanding the structural mechanism of these resistance mutations crucial for drug development. Here, we study several single resistance mutations in the allosteric inhibitor (nevirapine)-bound RT to analyze the mechanism of small structural changes leading to these large functional effects. In this study, we have shown that in absence of significant conformational variations in the inhibitor-bound wild-type RT and RT with single resistance mutations, the protein contact network analysis of their static structures, along with molecular dynamics simulations, can be a useful approach to understand the functional effect of small local conformational variations. The simple network analysis exposes the localized contact changes that lead to global rearrangement in the communication pattern within RT. Furthermore, these conformational changes have implications on the overall dynamics of RT. Using various measures, we show that a single resistance mutation can change the network structure and dynamics of RT to behave more like unbound RT, even in the presence of the inhibitor. This combined coarse-grained contact network and molecular dynamics approach promises to be a useful tool to analyze structure-function studies of proteins that show large functional changes with negligible variations in their overall conformation.


Subject(s)
Anti-HIV Agents , HIV Infections , Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , HIV Reverse Transcriptase/genetics , HIV Reverse Transcriptase/metabolism , HIV Reverse Transcriptase/therapeutic use , Humans , Molecular Conformation , Mutation , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/therapeutic use
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