In a whole-genome scan for genes associated with memory performance in humans, Calsyntenin-2 was identified as a gene associated with memory performance (Papassotiropoulos A., et al., 2006). Human Calsyntenin-2 encodes a post-synaptic protein that is highly expressed in the entorhinal cortex, hippocampus and temporal lobe of the human brain, areas important for episodic memory. Here, we have investigated if
casy-1, the C. elegans ortholog of human Calsyntenin-2, plays a role in the associative learning of the animals. We tested the behavior of animals carrying the
casy-1(
tm718) deletion allele in chemotaxis and thermotaxis learning assays and found defects in associative behavior in both assays. Since mammalian Calsyntenin-2 has been reported to bind to X-11 (Araki, Y., et al., 2003) the ortholog of C. elegans LIN-10, and
lin-10 was shown to regulate together with
lin-2 the clustering of the glutamate receptor GLR-1 (Rongo. C., et al., 1998), we investigated a possible functional interaction between
casy-1 and
glr-1. We observed similar behavioral defects in
glr-1(
n2461),
lin-10(
e1390) or
lin-2(
n105) mutants as in
casy-1(
tm718) animals. Moreover, we found that
glr-1 over-expression can partially rescue the behavioral defects of
casy-1(
tm718) mutants, while
casy-1(
tm718);
glr-1(
n2461) double mutants showed similar behavioral defects as either single mutant, indicating that GLR-1 and CASY-1 act in a common pathway. In conclusion, we have found that Calsyntenins play a conserved function in associative memory performance in C. elegans and humans. We propose that C. elegans CASY-1 interacts via LIN-10 with the GLR-1 complex to regulate glutamate receptor clustering.