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Abstract
Previously, we reported that DAF-2c, an axonal insulin receptor isoform in Caenorhabditis elegans, acts in the ASER gustatory neuron to regulate taste avoidance learning, a process in which worms learn to avoid salt concentrations experienced during starvation. Here, we show that secretion of INS-1, an insulin-like peptide, after starvation conditioning is sufficient to drive taste avoidance via DAF-2c signaling. Starvation conditioning enhances the salt-triggered activity of AIA neurons, the main sites of INS-1 release, which potentially promotes feedback signaling to ASER to maintain DAF-2c activity during taste avoidance. Genetic studies suggest that DAF-2c–Akt signaling promotes high-salt avoidance via a decrease in PLCβ activity. On the other hand, the DAF-2c pathway promotes low-salt avoidance via PLCε and putative Akt phosphorylation sites on PLCε are essential for taste avoidance. Our findings imply that animals disperse from the location at which they experience starvation by controlling distinct PLC isozymes via DAF-2c.
Masahiro Tomioka et al. study the function of a DAF-2c signaling pathway in salt avoidance after conditioning C. elegans with starvation. Their results suggest that taste avoidance behavior may depend on the control of distinct PLC isozymes via DAF-2c
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1 The University of Tokyo, Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Bunkyo-ku, Japan (GRID:grid.26999.3d) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 536X)
2 The University of Tokyo, Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Bunkyo-ku, Japan (GRID:grid.26999.3d) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 536X); Nagoya University, Neuroscience Institute, Graduate School of Science, Nagoya, Japan (GRID:grid.27476.30) (ISNI:0000 0001 0943 978X)