Egg laying in the nematode C. elegans alternates between an active and inactive behavior state. The active phase is initiated by the HSN neurons that release serotonin onto postsynaptic vulval muscles to increase their excitability. The vulval and body wall muscles are also innervated by the cholinergic Ventral Type C (VC) motor neurons whose activity is coincident with vulval muscle contraction and egg laying. Our research aims to dissect the function of the VC neurons and acetylcholine signaling within the egg-laying circuit. To do this, we are using mutants and transgenes to manipulate release of acetylcholine from the VCs and its signaling through both fast-acting nicotinic receptors expressed on the vulval muscles and slow-acting muscarinic receptors expressed on the
uv1 neuroendocrine cells. We find that blocking VC neurotransmitter release using tetanus toxin or histamine-gated chloride channels has no gross effect on egg laying. We also find that optogenetic activation of the VCs using Channelrhodopsin-2 fails to induce egg laying, but instead hypercontracts the body wall muscles and stops locomotion. Since active phases of egg laying are accompanied with changes in locomotor activity, the activity of VCs may serve to coordinate locomotor changes with egg release. Worms with silenced VCs also exhibit a 'kinker' locomotion phenotype, especially when reversing. To further study this phenotype we looked at
lin-39(
n1760) mutants, in which the VCs die by apoptosis.
lin-39(
n1760) mutants show a locomotion phenotype that resembles the kinked locomotion seen in animals with silenced VCs. We find that individual egg-laying events are accompanied by a slowing of locomotion, a response that is diminished when the VCs are silenced. Recent work has identified a muscarinic receptor, GAR-2, that is expressed in
uv1 and predicted to signal through Go to regulate release of tyramine and neuropeptides that inhibit HSN activity. Because egg release mechanically activates the
uv1 neuroendocrine cells, we propose that acetylcholine released from VCs during vulval muscle contraction primes the
uv1s to respond to passage of eggs through the vulva during egg laying. Together, our results suggest that the VCs are involved in coordinating general locomotor behavior in adult animals as well as slowing locomotion at the moment of egg release.