In order to locate food sources in a rich olfactory environment, C. elegans must be able to detect food associated odors and ignore or adapt to pervasive, food unrelated ones. The plasticity of the C. elegans olfactory response depends upon its ability to down regulate signaling within the AWA and AWC pairs of sensory neurons. We call this plasticity olfactory adaptation. In C. elegans, olfactory adaptation is both odor-specific and enduring. Adaptation of the AWC neurons requires a cGMP-dependent protein kinase, EGL-4. Intriguingly, an adaptation-defective allele of
egl-4,
ky95, was identified that had mutations only within its 3' UTR (L'Etoile et al., 2002). We found that these mutations disrupt a conserved translational regulatory motif, the Nanos Response Element (NRE). This element, present in the C. elegans
gld-1 3UTR, is bound by the pumilio RNA binding protein FBF-1 during germline development and spatially restricts its expression (Crittenden et al., 2002). FBF-1 has been shown to complex with other RNA binding proteins such as the NANOS related protein
nos-3 (Kraemer et al., 1999) and the Bicaudal- C homolog
gld-3 (Eckmann et al., 2002). As the
egl-4 NRE seemed to be key for the adaptation response, we investigated the role of FBF-1 with in this process. We found that FBF-1 was not only expressed in the AWC neuron but was required post-developmentally at the time of odor exposure to promote adaptation. Preliminary in vitro binding assays suggest that FBF-1 binds the conserved NRE within the
egl-4 mRNA. We also have evidence that
nos-1 and
gld-3 are required for olfactory adaptation. Our preliminary analysis of the other PUFs indicates that distinct PUFs may be required for adaptation to unique subsets of AWC-sensed odors. We speculate that the PUF family members may regulate translation of
egl-4 mRNA by a dynamic odor-induced pathway to promote adaptation in the AWC neuron. Eckmann et al., (2002) Dev Cell 3, 697-710. Crittenden et al., (2002) Nature, 417,660-3. Kraemer et al., (1999) Curr Biol 9, 1009-18 L'Etoile et al.,(2002) Neuron 36, 1079-1089.