Animals adequately change their behavioral patterns according to their internal states such as the extent of sexual maturation. To examine whether some signal(s) from gonad affect on worm's behavior, we analyzed a germline-ploliferation-defective mutant,
glp-1, and found that this mutant shows a mild chemotaxis defect to diacetyl, an AWA-sensed volatile attractant, but not to other odorants including other AWA-sensed odorants. Ablation of the germline precursor cells (Z2, Z3) in wild-type animals with a laser microbeam confirmed the germline effect; those animals also showed the decreased chemotactic response specifically to diacetyl. To examine directly whether signal transduction in the AWA sensory neurons is affected in the germline-defective
glp-1 mutant, we observed the diacetyl-evoked calcium transients by expressing a calcium indicator, Cameleon under the AWA-specific promoter. AWA neurons, in the control animals with normally developed gonads, responded to diacetyl presentation with sharp increases in calcium levels. Interestingly, the AWA neurons in the animals without germline responded to diacetyl in the similar manner, suggesting that the behavioral difference is not due to the AWA sensitivity to diacetyl per se. To reveal the molecular mechanism of the chemotactic regulation by germline, we conducted a genome-wide RNAi screening, and found that RNAi knockdown of the genes encoding electron transport chain components and ATP synthase subunits restored the chemotactic response to diacetyl in the animals without germline, suggesting the important role of mitochondria. We are currently trying the developmental-stage specific and tissue specific RNAi analyses to address how mitochondria function is involved in the control of chemotactic behavior. We hope that further analyses will reveal the molecular and cellular mechanisms how gonad signal(s) control the olfactory response to a specific attractant.