Schalek, Richard, Laskova, Valeriya, Chen, Sway, Cook, Steven, Suriyalaksh, Manusnan, Lichtman, Jeff, Guan, Asuka, Mitchell, James, Neubauer, Marianna, Witvliet, Daniel, Wen, Quan, Zhen, Mei, Samuel, Aravinthan, Lu, Yangning, Mulcahy, Ben
[
International Worm Meeting,
2015]
At all developmental stages, C. elegans navigates its environment by generating and propagating bending waves along its body. The neuronal circuit controlling locomotory behavior, however, changes significantly at the end of the L1 larval stage. During the L1 stage, B- and A-type cholinergic motor neurons innervate dorsal body wall muscles but not ventral muscles. D-type GABAergic motor neurons innervate ventral muscles but not dorsal muscles. Calcium imaging and optogenetic stimulation suggest that D-type neurons are inhibitory at the L1 stage, causing ventral muscles to relax. At the L2 stage and beyond, both ventral and dorsal muscles are symmetrically innervated by cholinergic and GABAergic motor neurons, and phasic excitation coupled to contralateral inhibition is thought to be responsible for the propagation of undulatory waves. So how does the worm produce undulatory behavior at the L1 stage given the profound ventral/dorsal asymmetry in excitatory cholinergic and inhibitory GABAergic inputs? To answer this question, we have reconstructed the L1 motor circuit using serial section electron microscopy. We are now using targeted cellular ablation, calcium imaging, and optogenetics to pinpoint the mechanism for ventral muscle contraction, and understand how alternating waves of excitation and relaxation drive undulation during the L1 stage. Our goal is a detailed mechanistic model of L1 locomotion. Comparing the circuit basis of L1 with adult worm locomotion should shed light on conserved principles of rhythmic locomotion and development of motor circuits.