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The homeobox gene lim-6 is required for distinct chemosensory representations in C. elegans

Jonathan T. Pierce-Shimomura, Serge Faumont, Michelle R. Gaston, Bret J. Pearson and Shawn R. Lockery
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Jonathan T. Pierce-Shimomura: Institute of Neuroscience
Serge Faumont: Institute of Neuroscience
Michelle R. Gaston: Institute of Neuroscience
Bret J. Pearson: Institute of Neuroscience
Shawn R. Lockery: Institute of Neuroscience

Nature, 2001, vol. 410, issue 6829, 694-698

Abstract: Abstract The ability to discriminate between different chemical stimuli is crucial for food detection, spatial orientation and other adaptive behaviours in animals. In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, spatial orientation in gradients of soluble chemoattractants (chemotaxis) is controlled mainly by a single pair of chemosensory neurons1. These two neurons, ASEL and ASER, are left–right homologues in terms of the disposition of their somata and processes, morphology of specialized sensory endings, synaptic partners and expression profile of many genes2,3. However, recent gene-expression studies have revealed unexpected asymmetries between ASEL and ASER. ASEL expresses the putative receptor guanylyl cyclase genes gcy-6 and gcy-7, whereas ASER expresses gcy-5 (ref. 4). In addition, only ASEL expresses the homeobox gene lim-6, an orthologue of the human LMX1 subfamily of homeobox genes5. Here we show, using laser ablation of neurons and whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology, that the asymmetries between ASEL and ASER extend to the functional level. ASEL is primarily sensitive to sodium, whereas ASER is primarily sensitive to chloride and potassium. Furthermore, we find that lim-6 is required for this functional asymmetry and for the ability to distinguish sodium from chloride. Thus, a homeobox gene increases the representational capacity of the nervous system by establishing asymmetric functions in a bilaterally symmetrical neuron pair.

Date: 2001
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DOI: 10.1038/35070575

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