Animals acquire information from their surroundings and store some information as a memory in order to adapt to changing environments. To mitigate effects of old information stored in their brain, memory erasing by "forgetting" is important for their survival. However, its molecular mechanism remains unclear. To investigate mechanisms of forgetting, we utilize a behavioral change in olfactory adaptation of Caenorhabdits elegans (C. elegans). C. elegans is highly attracted to some odorants such as diacetyl, although, after prolonged exposure to odorants without food, the animals adapt to the odorants and show weak chemoattraction. The adapted animals are able to recover their chemoattraction after the cultivation with food for several hours. Previously, our studies showed that TIR-1/JNK-1 pathway in AWC sensory neurons accelerates forgetting of olfactory adaptation, through releasing of "forgetting signals", in a cell-non-autonomous manner. However, the molecular basis of "forgetting signals" is still unknown. To confirm whether neuropeptides are responsible for "forgetting signals", we analyzed mutants of
egl-3 and
egl-21 which encode enzymes for neuropeptide processing, proprotein convertase 2 and carboxypeptidase E, respectively. This analysis revealed that
egl-21 animals showed a forgetting defective phenotype but not
egl-3 animals. This result suggests that neuropeptides that are processed with EGL-21 might be required for forgetting. Furthermore, to identify neuropeptides and receptors responsible for forgetting signaling, we are analyzing the mutants of 29 neuropeptide genes (flp, nlp), 23 neuropeptide receptor genes (npr) and 7 cell-signaling G-protein genes (gpa). So far, we found 7 candidate genes involved in forgetting: 3 neuropeptide genes and 4 neuropeptide receptor genes. This suggests that multiple neuropeptides and receptors are important for forgetting, as "forgetting signals" released from neurons including AWC. Further analyses of them will reveal the molecular machinery underlying "forgetting signals".