Phenotypic plasticity can result from programmed changes in gene expression due to environmental conditions experienced early in development. Our previous work has shown that wild-type C. elegans adults that passed through the developmentally arrested, stress resistant stage named dauer (postdauers) retain a cellular memory of early life stress that manifests as genome-wide changes in gene expression, chromatin states, and altered life history traits compared to animals that experienced continuous development (controls). One target of developmental programming in C. elegans is the
osm-9 TRPV channel gene, which is significantly downregulated in postdauer ADL neurons. A consequence of this gene expression change is decreased avoidance of pheromone component ascr#3 in postdauer hermaphrodites, which is an OSM-9 dependent and ADL-mediated behavior. We have also demonstrated that the somatic, nuclear Argonaute NRDE-3 is required for the downregulation of
osm-9 expression in postdauer ADL neurons and the altered ascr#3 avoidance; however, the role of NRDE-3 in regulating endogenous gene expression based on environmental experience is not well characterized. To further investigate how the NRDE-3 RNAi pathway regulates developmental programming of ADL neurons as a result of early life stress, we examined the mRNA transcriptome of control and postdauer ADL neurons from wild type and
nrde-3(
gg66) strains expressing a Psre-1::gfp transgene using FACS followed by mRNA-Seq. Our preliminary analyses show that over 17,500 genes are expressed in ADL neurons, and that 711 of those genes exhibit significantly altered expression in postdauers compared to controls. This set of ADL developmentally programmed genes are enriched for functions such as metabolism and chemotaxis. Surprisingly, 80% of the genes with altered expression in wild-type postdauer ADL neurons no longer exhibit significant changes in
nrde-3 ADL neurons, suggesting a role for NRDE-3 in regulating endogenous neuronal genes. Our results indicate that small RNAs play critical roles in reprogramming a neuronal mRNA transcriptome as a result of developmental history and underscore the importance of neuronal networks in incorporating environmental cues to program life history.