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Oxygen sensation and social feeding mediated by a C-elegans guanylate cyclase homologue
Gray, J. M.; Karow, D. S.; Lu, H.; Chang, A. J.; Chang, J. S.; Ellis, R. E.; Marletta, M. A.; Bargmann, C. I.
2004-07-15
Citation:Gray, JM; Karow, DS; Lu, H; Chang, AJ; Chang, JS; Ellis, RE; Marletta, MA; Bargmann, CI. (2004) "Oxygen sensation and social feeding mediated by a C-elegans guanylate cyclase homologue." Nature 430(6997): 317-322. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/62676>
Abstract: Specialized oxygen-sensing cells in the nervous system generate rapid behavioural responses to oxygen. We show here that the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans exhibits a strong behavioural preference for 5-12% oxygen, avoiding higher and lower oxygen levels. 3',5'-cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) is a common second messenger in sensory transduction and is implicated in oxygen sensation. Avoidance of high oxygen levels by C. elegans requires the sensory cGMP-gated channel tax-2/tax-4 and a specific soluble guanylate cyclase homologue, gcy-35. The GCY-35 haem domain binds molecular oxygen, unlike the haem domains of classical nitric-oxide-regulated guanylate cyclases. GCY-35 and TAX-4 mediate oxygen sensation in four sensory neurons that control a naturally polymorphic social feeding behaviour in C. elegans. Social feeding and related behaviours occur only when oxygen exceeds C. elegans' preferred level, and require gcy-35 activity. Our results suggest that GCY-35 is regulated by molecular oxygen, and that social feeding can be a behavioural strategy for responding to hyperoxic environments.