Chemosensory plasticity in response to dietary signals and nutritional need has been observed in a wide range of animals, which allows them to identify suitable food sources and avoid harmful environments. However, the mechanisms behind how dietary signals alter the properties of chemosensory neurons is poorly understood. Dynamic changes in the expression levels of individual chemoreceptor genes could provide a strategy by which C. elegans rapidly modifies its behavior according to its diet. We previously identified an individual chemoreceptor gene,
srh-234, in the ADL sensory neuron type of C. elegans, which is downregulated upon starvation (Gruner et al, PLoS Genetics, 2014). This downregulation is dependent on cell- and non-cell-autonomous mechanisms regulated by insulin signaling and bHLH and MEF2 transcription factors (Gruner et al, PLoS Genetics, 2016). We now show that a standard E. coli OP50 diet relative to the good Comamonas DA1877 diet induces dramatic changes in
srh-234 expression levels in ADL neurons similar to a starvation response, i.e. expression of a
srh-234p::gfp reporter is high when animals are fed a E. coli diet, but low when animals are fed a Comamonas diet. When we mixed Comamonas with E. coli in different dilutions (1:1 and 1:9 DA1877:OP50), we found that
srh-234p::gfp expression is strongly reduced similar to a Comamonas diet alone. These mixed diet experiments coupled to the observation that Comanonas is considered not to be nutrient poor diet (Watson et al. Cell, 2014), suggest that the Comamonas-induced reduction in
srh-234p::gfp expression in ADL is likely not due to a starvation response. These results lead to the hypothesis that specific bacterial signals (e.g. secondary metabolites) produced by Comamonas may directly via ADL neurons or indirectly through food ingestion regulate
srh-234 expression. We preliminary show that
srh-234p::gfp expression is not reduced when animals smell (but not touch) Comamonas when fed on a E. coli diet, implying that perhaps ingestion of a Comamonas-generated signal is required to influence
srh-234 expression in ADL in a cell-nonautonomous manner. We are currently investigating the pathways by which previously known bacterial-derived signals produced by Comamonas (Watson et al. Cell, 2014) regulate
srh-234 expression levels in ADL neurons. Taken together, we propose that turning chemoreceptors on and off at the level of transcription in chemosensory neurons may help C. elegans to optimize their chemosensory responses to relevant microbial molecules in their environment.