Ligand-gated ion channels (LGICs) play important roles in synaptic communication and the regulation of behaviours. The cys-loop superfamily of LGICs, which contains mammalian nicotinic acetylcholine and GABA receptors, has undergone vast gene expansion in nematodes and includes channels gated by classical and non-classical neurotransmitters. Yet the majority of C. elegans LGICs remain uncharacterised, with no known ligand or biological function. We have undertaken a deorphanisaiton study of a number of uncharacterised C. elegans LGICs, in particular from a subfamily of 12 channels known as the "diverse" group. Using two-electrode voltage clamp recordings from Xenopus oocytes injected with worm LGICs, we identified ligands for 5 of the 12 channels in the diverse subgroup. All are inhibitory anion-selective channels, yet despite sharing close sequence similarity, they are gated by chemically diverse ligands. We identify three receptors for choline, GGR-1, GGR-2 and LGC-40, which despite binding the same ligand differ in their pharmacological and neuronal expression profiles. This may point towards a potential role for choline in the regulation of the nervous system. Interestingly, we found a single channel, LGC-39 to be gated not only by acetylcholine but also by aminergic ligands, in particular octopamine and tyramine. Thus LGC-39 has the capacity to form a polymodal receptor activated by chemically disparate neurotransmitters. The expression pattern of
lgc-39 reveals that it is present in a number of neurons which receive both aminergic and cholinergic input, including AVA, the major synaptic target of the octopamine producing RICs. Finally, we find that LGC-41 is not activated by any classical neurotransmitter, but is activated by betaine, a metabolite chemically related to choline. LGC-41, along with putative betaine synthesis genes, is widely expressed in the nervous system, in particular in a number of neurons associated with regulating search behaviours including ASI. Strikingly, we find that
lgc-41 and betaine synthesis mutant worms show defects in transitioning from local to global search behaviour in the absence of food. This implicates betaine and its receptor in regulating complex behaviours which rely on the integration of a number of sensory inputs. Taken together our findings highlight the remarkable functional and behavioural diversification amongst the LGICs in C. elegans.