The enhancement of sensory responses after prior exposure to a stimulus is a fundamental mechanism of neural function in animals. Its molecular basis, however, has not been studied in as much depth as the reduction of sensory responses, such as adaptation or habituation. We have found that the avoidance behavior of C. elegans in response to repellent odors (2-nonanone or 1-octanol) is enhanced rather than reduced after preexposure to the odors (KD Kimura, K Fujita, I Katsura, in revision). The enhancement of 2-nonanone avoidance was not dependent on the presence or absence of food during conditioning, which generally functions as a strong positive or negative unconditioned stimulus, suggesting that the enhancement is acquired as a type of non-associative learning. In addition, genetic and pharmacological analyses revealed that the enhancement of 2-nonanone avoidance requires dopamine signaling via D2-like dopamine receptor
dop-3. To identify the cellular site of action of
dop-3, we are conducting neuron-specific rescue experiments. Various promoters for subsets of neurons were fused to
dop-3 cDNA for the rescue experiments and to fluorescent protein to study the expression patterns. Expression of
dop-3 cDNA in the neurons that are reportedly required to regulate locomotion (ventral nerve cord motorneurons with
acr-2 or
unc-47 promoters; Chase et al., 2004) or CREB expression (RIC interneurons with
tdc-1 promoter or SIA with
ceh-17; Suo et al., 2009) did not rescue the enhancement-defective phenotype while pan-neuronal expression (with the H20 promoter; a gift from Dr. T. Ishihara) rescued the phenotype, suggesting that
dop-3 functions at a new site of action to regulate the enhancement of 2-nonanone avoidance. We continue the rescue experiment to identify neuron(s) for the
dop-3 action. We thank Drs. S. Suo (Mt. Sinai Hospital, Canada) for the
dop-3 cDNA and M. Tomioka and Y. Iino (U. Tokyo, Japan) for the promoter library.