The glycerophosphodiesterases (GDEs) hydrolyze water-soluble glycerohposphodiesters and GPI anchored proteins, of which hydrolyzed substrates regulate signal transduction, osmoprotection, motor-neuronal differentiation, cytoskeletal organization and osteoblast differentiation (Corda et al., 2014). However, functions of GDEs in nervous systems are not fully understood. We first performed BLAST searches against the C. elegans genome with sequences of mammalian GDE domain and identified five orthologous genes (Zheng et al., 2002), which we named as
gde-1-5. We then examined expression patterns of these genes by generating transgenic animals expressing gfp reporter transgenes under the control of their own promoter. We found that
gde-4 was specifically expressed in the ADL chemosensory neurons. We and other previously showed shown that the ADL neurons detect ascaroside pheromone ascr#3 (C9) (Jang et al., 2012). To investigate role of GDE-4 in ADL, we generated
gde-4 null mutant animals and found that
gde-4 mutants fail to exhibit ascr#3 avoidance behavior. Currently, we are performing rescue experiments by expressing
gde-4 cDNA in ADL, and calcium imaging of ADL in
gde-4 mutant animals.