CGC Bibliography Paper 4978

Serotonin modulates locomotory behavior and coordinates egg-laying and movement in Caenorhabditis elegans.

Hardaker LA, Singer E, Kerr R, Zhou G, Schafer WR

Medline:
11745666
Citation:
Journal of Neurobiology 49: 303-313 2001
Type:
ARTICLE
Genes:
bas-1 cat-4 egl-1 glr-1 nmr-1 tph-1
Abstract:
Biogenic amines have been implicated in the modulation of neural circuits involved in diverse behaviors in a wide variety of organisms. In the nematode C elegans, serotonin has been shown to modulate the temporal pattern of egg-laying behavior. Here we show that serotonergic neurotransmission is also required for modulation of the timing of behavioral events associated with locomotion and for coordinating locomotive behavior with egg-laying. Using an automated tracking system to record locomotory behavior over long time periods, we determined that both the direction and velocity of movement fluctuate in a stochastic pattern in wild-type worms. During periods of active egg-laying, the patterns of reversals and velocity were altered: velocity increased transiently before egg-laying events, while reversals increased in frequency following egg-laying events. The temporal coordination between egg-laying and locomotion was dependent on the serotonergic HSN egg-laying motorneurons as well as the decision-making AVF interneurons, which receive synaptic input from the HSNs. Serotonin-deficient mutants also failed to coordinate egg-laying and locomotion and exhibited an abnormally low overall reversal frequency. Thus, serotonin appears to function specifically to facilitate increased locomotion during periods of active egglaying, and to function generally to modulate decisionmaking neurons that promote forward movement.