Abstract
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans deliberately crawls toward the negative pole in an electric field. By quantifying the movements of individual worms navigating electric fields, we show that C. elegans prefers to crawl at specific angles to the direction of the electric field in persistent periods of forward movement and that the preferred angle is proportional to field strength. C. elegans reorients itself in response to time-varying electric fields by using sudden turns and reversals, standard reorientation maneuvers that C. elegans uses during other modes of motile behavior. Mutation or laser ablation that disrupts the structure and function of amphid sensory neurons also disrupts electrosensory behavior. By imaging intracellular calcium dynamics among the amphid sensory neurons of immobilized worms, we show that specific amphid sensory neurons are sensitive to the direction and strength of electric fields. We extend our analysis to the motor level by showing that specific interneurons affect the utilization of sudden turns and reversals during electrosensory steering. Thus, electrosensory behavior may be used as a model system for understanding how sensory inputs are transformed into motor outputs by the C. elegans nervous system.
- C. elegans
- electrical stimulation
- motor control
- movement (motion; motor activity)
- navigation
- sensorimotor
Introduction
The major function of the nervous system is to transform sensory inputs into motor outputs, ranging in sophistication from simple reflexive responses to navigation in variable environments. In a few cases, it has been possible to map feedforward circuits that encode reflexive responses, such as gill withdrawal in Aplysia or touch avoidance in the nematode (Kupfermann and Kandel, 1969; Chalfie et al., 1985). However, the neural circuits that guide navigation are less understood, because complexities may arise at each level from sensory input to motor output. For instance, at the sensory level, an organism may have to integrate time-varying sensory inputs with its own movements to infer its own orientation; an example is Escherichia coli chemotaxis, in which the bacterium processes temporal changes in ambient chemical concentration during periods of its own forward movement to decide whether it is swimming toward or away from nutrients (Berg and Brown, 1972). At the motor level, an organism may have to decide between different types of movements in response to the same sensory inputs; an example is the leech for which triggering movement necessitates the choice between crawling movement or swimming movement (Esch et al., 2002).
The neural basis of navigational behavior may be approachable in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, as sensory detection, behavioral choice, and motor output are regulated by a small 302-neuron nervous system. In isotropic environments, C. elegans motility may be characterized as periods of forward movement (runs) that are interrupted by reorientation maneuvers (turns and reversals) (Croll, 1975). C. elegans navigates sensory gradients during chemotaxis or thermotaxis based on random trial-and-error (Pierce-Shimomura et al., 1999; Ryu and Samuel, 2002). When the worm happens to be oriented toward improving conditions, it prolongs runs. When it happens to be oriented toward declining conditions, it shortens runs. This strategy is called the biased random walk. In certain environments, C. elegans is also capable of direct steering. For example, when the worm navigates thermal gradients at temperatures near its previous cultivation temperature, it tends to crawl along isotherms in single prolonged runs (Hedgecock and Russell, 1975; Luo et al., 2006).
Here, we focus on electrosensory behavior, another case of direct steering. Sukul and Croll (1978) noted the strikingly straight trajectories of wild-type C. elegans as they crawled toward the negative poles of an electric field, but they neither quantified the physical determinants of electrotaxis (also called galvanotaxis) nor determined whether electrotaxis has a neural basis. In this study, we analyzed the movements of individual worms navigating fixed and time-varying electric fields across a wide range of stimulus parameters, quantified the effects of specific genetic and physical perturbations to the C. elegans nervous system on electrosensory behavior, and quantified electrosensory detection among the amphid sensory neurons by imaging intracellular calcium dynamics. Our results establish electrosensory behavior as a new framework for studying how the C. elegans nervous system converts sensory perception into motor behavior.
Materials and Methods
Strains.
C. elegans strains were maintained and grown with standard procedures (Brenner, 1974). We used the wild-type strain N2 and the mutant strains che-1(p674), che-2(e1033), che-13(e1805), eat-4(ad819), osm-3 (p802), osm-5 (p813), osm-6(p811), osm-9(ky10), osm-10(n1602), tax-6(p675), tax-4(p678), ttx-1(p767), ttx-3(ks5), and odr-7(ky4), all obtained from the C. elegans Genetics Center (Minneapolis, MN). Transgenic strains ttx-3::gfp (which labels the AIY neurons), osm6::gfp (which labels the ASJ neurons and others), sra-6::gfp (which labels the ASH and ASI neurons), str-1::gfp (which labels AWB), and che-1(p674);ceh-36::gfp(oy1550) (which labels AWC in a che-1 mutant background) were gifts from P. Sengupta (Brandeis University, Waltham, MA). The transgenic strain nmr-1::gfp, which labels the AVA and RIM neurons, and the mutant strain glr-1(ky176) dpy-19(n1347ts, mat) III;akIs9 X(Pglr-1::GLR-1(A/T)) were gifts from A. Maricq (University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT).
Electrotaxis assay.
In each experiment, young adult worms were selected from a cultivation plate and rinsed in nematode growth medium buffer. The rinsed worms were then picked to the surface of an agar disc made with deionized water, a salt of defined concentration (see Table 1 for particular salts and concentrations used), glycerol to raise the osmolarity to 50 mm, and 1.7% w/w Bacto-Agar (BD Biosciences, Franklin Lakes, NJ). The agar disc was then placed in the experimental apparatus shown in Figure 1 A.
The experimental apparatus resembled a two-axis gel electrophoresis chamber. A platform at its center supported the agar disc such that all but its top surface was immersed in a bath solution with the same salt and glycerol concentrations as the disc. The bath was continuously circulated throughout the chamber to reduce resistive heating. During each experiment, we verified that the agar surface temperature did not rise >1°C with a T-type thermocouple.
Voltage across each axis of the chamber was generated with an RIS-496.1 computer-controlled vector amplifier provided by W. Hill (Rowland Institute at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA). By separately controlling the voltage across each axis, electric fields of defined direction and amplitude up to 25 V/cm could be imposed on the agar surface. Four platinum measurement electrodes were also inserted into the agar surface to continuously verify electric field direction and amplitude during each experiment.
Worms were monitored as described by Ryu and Samuel (2002). In brief, a CCD camera equipped with a zoom lens was used to image the worms on the agar surfaces illuminated obliquely by a ring of superbright light-emitting diodes (LEDs). Images were captured with a PCI frame-grabber (National Instruments, Austin, TX). Worm trajectories were analyzed using LabVIEW (National Instruments) and Matlab (Mathworks, Framingham, MA).
Surgery.
Laser ablation of individual neurons was performed using standard procedures (Bargmann and Avery, 1995), except that a cavity-dumped Ti:sapphire femtosecond laser (KMLabs, Boulder, CO) was used to deliver the laser pulses instead of the more commonly used nanosecond pulsed dye laser. Neurons were killed in L1 larvae anesthetized with sodium azide. The behavior of surgically operated worms was tested at the young adult stage. Destruction of the targeted neuron was double-checked by microscopy after behavioral assays. Laser surgery was performed on young adult worms using the procedures established by Chung et al. (2006). Briefly, the amphid sensory cells of young adult worms were stained with DiI using standard techniques. The worms were anesthetized with sodium azide, and the labeled dendrite was targeted and severed by brief exposure to the Ti:sapphire femtosecond laser beam. Worms were then recovered (>10 h) and subjected to behavioral assays.
Fluorescence imaging.
Intracellular calcium dynamics were measured using the YC3.60 variant of the calcium-sensitive cameleon protein (Nagai et al., 2004). The YC3.60 open reading frame was cloned into the pPD49.26 vector with the unc-54 3′ untranslated region. Expression of YC3.60 was driven by the odr-4 promoter, which was amplified from C. elegans genomic DNA using primer sequences 5′-AGCTGACATCTAGATGAGATATGTGTTCCGACAGAGCTG-3′ and 5′-TGAAGTCCCCGGGTCCTGGAGTTGGACGTCAAACA-3′. We quantified calcium dynamics as changes in ratiometric fluorescence emission between the cyan and yellow fluorescent protein components of cameleon, in the same manner that we described previously (Clark et al., 2006). Here, worms were immobilized on a 2% agar pad containing 0.05% tetramisole [an acetylcholine agonist that paralyzes the worms (Knobel et al., 1999)] or immobilized with cyanoacrylate glue (Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL) such that the tip of the nose was exposed. We found no differences in the recordings of intracellular calcium dynamics with worms immobilized with tetramisole or by gluing. A coverslip was placed over the worm, and the preparation was immersed in solution containing 0.25 mm NaCl and 50 mm glycerol in a plastic chamber. The electric field was applied using four platinum electrodes lining the ends of the chamber, under feedback-control using a computer running LabVIEW (National Instruments). Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) measurements of the cameleon signal were conducted as described by Clark et al. (2006). The response of an individual neuron was measured in the region of interest surrounding the cell body of specific amphid sensory neurons. Cells were identified based on patterns of cameleon expression under the odr-4 promoter. Mosaic expression of the extrachromosomal array did not allow simultaneous measurement from all odr-4-expressing neurons in all worms. Worms were selected for expression of cameleon in subsets of amphid sensory neurons that facilitated unambiguous cell identification.
Results
C. elegans crawls toward the negative pole of an electric field
First, we quantified the movements of individual young adult worms navigating agar surfaces while subjected to electric fields with fixed amplitude and direction, using an apparatus that allowed us to control the effects of resistive heating as well as define the chemistry and ionic conductivity of the agar surface (Fig. 1 A). Representative tracks made by wild-type worms navigating these electric fields are shown in Figure 1 B. At a threshold of ∼3 V/cm, the worm crawls deliberately toward the negative pole with stable and persistent trajectories along lines at a specific acute angle to the electric field. Electrosensory navigation is robust, and within seconds of turning on the electric field, nearly every worm on an agar surface is entrained in persistent movement toward the negative pole (supplemental movie, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). Occasionally, an individual worm crawls in the opposite direction toward the positive pole at fields <3 V/cm. Because these approaches to the positive pole were rare and difficult to reproduce (<1% of observations), we did not investigate them more closely. In stronger electric fields, the worm crawls toward the negative pole along lines at larger angles to the electric field. We found that the approach angle is proportional to electric field strength up to 14 V/cm at which the worm crawls at 60° to the electric field (Fig. 1 C).
By controlling the salt concentration and thereby the conductivity of the agar surfaces, we were able to distinguish the effects of current and voltage. We did not use salt concentrations higher than 4 mm, which led to resistive heating by >0.1°C, or salt concentrations lower than 0.25 mm, because for unknown reasons, C. elegans does not crawl on deionized surfaces. Before activating the electric field in each experiment, we verified that worm motility was superficially normal, which we inferred from observations of normal crawling speed as well as spontaneous turns and reversals. We found that neither substituting different ambient ionic salts nor varying salt concentration significantly alters the constant of proportionality between the approach angle and voltage gradient (Table 1). After verifying the negligible effects of different amounts or types of ambient ions on approach angle, we routinely used 0.25 mm NaCl in subsequent experiments.
C. elegans crawls on either its left or right side, so that either its dorsal or ventral side faces the negative pole. In strong fields, an individual worm sometimes zigzags toward the negative pole, appearing to alternate between dorsal and ventral tracks but keeping the same absolute angle to the electric field (supplemental movie, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). Crawling speed is not affected by the electric field in the range that we studied, but C. elegans is quickly paralyzed by electric fields stronger than 14 V/cm. Electrically induced paralysis is reversible; worms immediately resume crawling after switching off the field.
C. elegans responds to time-varying fields using turns and reversals
We found that C. elegans responds to the slow rotation of an electric field by using slight turns to correct its crawling direction. Steady rotation of an electric field causes the worm to crawl in circles, with faster rotation resulting in tighter circles up to ∼10°/s (Fig. 2 A). Circling in place allowed us to monitor individual worms for extended periods without having to interrupt the field. Individual worms circle for hours without evidence of adaptation or desensitization. After 1–3 h of continuous circling, worms stop moving altogether, perhaps from exhaustion.
We found that C. elegans responds to step rotation of an electric field by immediately reorienting itself to the new direction. C. elegans uses two stereotyped maneuvers to reorient itself during motile behavior (Croll, 1975): (1) turns involving a sudden redirection of forward crawling without pause or slowdown (also called omega turns because the worm's body briefly resembles the letter Ω); and (2) reversals involving several seconds of backward movement before the worm resumes forward movement in a new direction. A representative turn and reversal in response to 60° step rotations of the electric field are shown in Figure 2 B. Thus, step rotation of the electric field necessitates a motor decision, whether C. elegans uses a sudden turn or reversal to reorient to the new direction. The choice between turn and reversal appears to be made randomly, but increasing the size of the reorientation angle increases the likelihood of reversal. To reorient by 30°, the worm almost always uses turns. To reorient by 120°, the worm almost always uses reversals (Fig. 2 C).
The frequency range of the electrosensory response
To quantify the frequency range of the electrosensory response, we studied C. elegans subjected to electric fields fixed in direction but modulated in amplitude with sinusoidal waveforms between 0 and 10 V/cm at different frequencies. When subjected to modulation frequencies >16 Hz, C. elegans crawls along straight lines with directions distributed narrowly around a specific absolute angle, just as they would in a fixed field of 5 V/cm, which corresponds to the DC offset of the modulation. But when subjected to modulation frequencies <16 Hz, worms fluctuate their crawling direction over a wider range of angles as they appear to sense the modulations in electric field strength and attempt to select new approach angles. Graphing directional fluctuation against the frequency of amplitude modulation, the behavioral response resembles a low-pass filter with a cutoff frequency of 16 Hz (Fig. 2 D). These data suggest that electrosensation must neither be slower than 16 Hz nor take longer than 60 ms, a limit within the bounds of C. elegans neurophysiology. Mechanosensory channels of body-wall neurons, for example, conduct current within 5 ms of light touch (O'Hagan et al., 2005).
Electrosensory behavior requires the amphid sensory neurons
The cuticle skin of C. elegans is a dense, protective, collagen-like structure, providing a high-resistance barrier to ionic transport and loss (Johnstone, 1994). Therefore, the sensory neurons that detect electric fields are likely to be those neurons that traverse the cuticle, such as the amphid sensory neurons that detect ambient chemicals. We analyzed electrosensory behavior in various sensory mutants by subjecting individual worms to slowly rotating electric fields (1.5°/s) and comparing their trajectories to the smoothly circling trajectories of wild-type worms (Fig. 3 A). We characterized the defects of individual worms as either partially defective, meaning that a worm follows the rotating field but with frequent pauses and wrong turns, or severely defective, meaning that a worm is never able to align itself to the rotating electric field within each trial (Fig. 3A). We adopted this strategy for screening electrosensory phenotypes because it is more sensitive to partial defects than, for example, allowing worms to navigate electric fields for an extended period of time and looking for failure to accumulate at the negative pole.
We found that mutations in certain genes that stunt the growth and development of sensory cilia in most or all of the amphid sensory neurons also disrupt the worm's ability to follow rotating electric fields (Fig. 3 B). These genes include che-2, che-13, osm-3, osm-5, and osm-6, which also affect chemosensory and osmosensory behaviors (Perkins et al., 1986). Each of these genes affect the formation of sensory cilia in the amphid sensory neurons: CHE-2 is a WD40 protein that is required for ciliary extension (Fujiwara et al., 1999); CHE-13 is a transport protein (Haycraft et al., 2003); OSM-3 is an anterograde motor kinesin (Shakir et al., 1993); OSM-5 and OSM-6 are located within the structure of the sensory cilia (Collet et al., 1998; Haycraft et al., 2001). In contrast, genes that affect the development and function of only certain subsets of amphid sensory neurons have lesser or negligible effects on electrosensory behavior. These genes include osm-9 and osm-10, which affect the ASH osmosensory neuron; odr-7, which affects the AWA olfactory neuron; ttx-1, which affects the AFD thermosensory neuron; and che-1, which affects the ASE chemosensory neuron (Sengupta et al., 1994; Hart et al., 1999; Satterlee et al., 2001; Uchida et al., 2003).
We also examined several genes that affect signal transduction or synaptic transmission in amphid sensory neuronal pathways. We found that electrosensory behavior is severely disrupted by mutation in the tax-6 gene, which encodes a calcineurin subunit that is widely expressed in neurons and muscle cells, and by mutation in the eat-4 gene, which is required for glutamatergic neurotransmission (Fig. 3 B) (Lee et al., 1999; Kuhara et al., 2002). Thus, electrosensory, thermosensory, and chemosensory detection all use amphid sensory neurons as well as common pathways for signal transduction and synaptic transmission.
Amphid sensory neurons detect electric field direction and amplitude
To characterize the response properties of sensory neurons that might contribute to electrosensory behavior, we monitored intracellular calcium dynamics in individual amphid sensory neurons of immobilized worms. We prepared transgenic worms that expressed the fluorescent calcium-binding protein cameleon (YC3.60) in all of the amphid sensory neurons under the control of the odr-4 promoter and subjected individual animals to slowly rotating electric fields above the threshold for electrosensory behavior. We found that the ASJ sensory neuron produced the strongest and most reliable stimulus-evoked intracellular calcium transients with the rotating electric field (29 stimulus-evoked responses of 34 different worms) (see sample trace in Fig. 4). We also obtained qualitatively similar but smaller stimulus-evoked calcium transients in the ASH, AWB, AWC, and ASK neurons. In contrast, we were unable to detect any stimulus-evoked calcium transients in the ADL and ASI neurons. Interestingly, the strongest intracellular calcium transients were always observed when the immobilized worm was pointing toward the positive pole, not the negative pole. Thus, if electrosensory behavior is regulated by stimulation of amphid sensory neurons, the worm may be directing movement decisions to lower amphid sensory neuronal activity.
To verify that the amphid sensory neurons actually play a functional role in electrosensory behavior, we performed laser ablation experiments. Because more than one amphid sensory neuron might be involved, we first sought to test the involvement of the entire group of amphid neurons. Femtosecond laser ablation now allows us to snip individual nerve fibers in adult C. elegans without disrupting collateral fibers (Chung et al., 2006). We specifically labeled the amphid neurons of individual adult worms using DiI, a red fluorescent membrane dye, and systematically snipped each and every labeled dendrite by exposure to tightly focused femtosecond light pulses emitted from a cavity-dumped Ti:sapphire laser (Fig. 5 A). We found that snipping all of the dendrites in both amphid bundles severely disrupted electrosensory behavior (Fig. 5 B).
Next, we assessed the contribution of specific amphid sensory neurons using laser-killing experiments. To facilitate cell identification, we used transgenic lines that expressed green fluorescent protein (GFP) in subsets of amphid sensory neurons, except in the case of ASK laser-killing experiments, in which we used DiI staining to identify the neuron. We ablated targeted neuronal cell bodies in the L1 larval stage and quantified electrosensory behavior in the young adult animals. We found that killing the ASJ or ASH neurons, which had produced the most significant stimulus-evoked calcium dynamics in physiology experiments (Fig. 4), led to significant disruptions in electrotaxis (Fig. 5 C). We found that killing neurons that had produced weaker responses in calcium imaging experiments (ASK, AWC, and AWB) had lesser or no effect on electrotactic behavior; it is possible that the smaller contribution of these neurons is masked when ASJ and ASH are intact. When we killed the ASI neuron, from which we were never able to record stimulus-evoked calcium dynamics, we found no behavioral disruption (Fig. 5 C). These results suggest that the observed stimulus-evoked calcium dynamics in specific amphid sensory neurons are correlated with behaviorally relevant detection of electric fields.
Physiological response properties of the ASJ sensory neuron
We asked whether the physiological response properties of amphid sensory neurons were consistent with quantifiable characteristics of the navigational behavior. Although all intracellular calcium transients recorded using cameleon from the amphid sensory neurons were qualitatively similar, the consistently largest signals produced by ASJ made it the best choice for more thorough physiological investigation. First, we analyzed directional sensitivity and found that a sinusoidal temporal variation in electric field amplitude (from −3 to 3 V/cm) produced intracellular calcium dynamics that were correlated with electric field direction: the strongest calcium dynamics were obtained when the worm's head was aligned with the electric field and was highest (lowest) when the head was pointing straight toward the positive (negative) pole (Fig. 6 A). Another way of analyzing the electric field directional response is to subject the worm to a slowly rotating electric field with fixed amplitude. Using slowly rotating electric fields, we again found that the ASJ neuron is most sensitive to the electric field when the head is pointing directly toward the positive pole (Fig. 6 B). Moreover, a 2–3 s delay between the electrical stimulus and the intracellular calcium dynamic response was quantified by using clockwise and counterclockwise rotating electric fields, which produced slight clockwise and counterclockwise shifts, respectively, in the level of intracellular calcium as a function of instantaneous field direction (Fig. 6 B). Because behavioral measurements indicate that the electrosensory response may be as fast as 60 ms (Fig. 2 D), it is likely that much of the delay is attributable to slow signal kinetics of the YC3.60 reporter molecule itself (Reiff et al., 2005).
Finally, we asked whether the ASJ neuron exhibited intracellular calcium dynamics in the same amplitude range as the navigational behavior. We fixed the direction of the electric field along the direction of the head of immobilized worms and subjected them to temporal variations in electric field strength using sine waves with different amplitudes (Fig. 6 C). In this way, we found that the magnitude of the calcium dynamic response increases in the range of 0–4 V/cm and is saturated by stronger electric fields (Fig. 6 D).
Neuronal correlates of motor activity
To obtain evidence that electrosensory behavior is wired into downstream sensorimotor circuits, we examined the contribution of interneurons that are known to affect specific motor outputs. Recently, neural circuits that mediate exploratory navigation in C. elegans have been mapped by identifying specific genetic and physical lesions to the nervous system, affecting the rate of spontaneous turns and reversals exhibited during dispersal in isotropic environments (Tsalik and Hobert, 2003; Wakabayashi et al., 2004; Gray et al., 2005). Although the role of a neuron in the execution of spontaneous maneuvers during dispersal might be different than in that of stimulus-evoked maneuvers during navigation, we took the identification of these neurons as a starting point. In particular, we investigated whether certain neurons might play roles in either the execution of turns and reversals in deliberate reorientations during electrosensory behavior or the suppression of turns and reversals once worms are properly oriented.
Step rotation of the electric field provided a simple assay for the study of turns and reversals in deliberate reorientation. In response to step rotation, wild-type worms use turn and reversal maneuvers randomly, but with quantifiable relative likelihoods (Fig. 2 C). We hypothesized that certain neuronal lesions might affect the worm's ability to use turns and reversals when it attempts to reorient itself in response to step rotations of an electric field. The RIM and AVA neurons appeared to be a good starting point for these experiments, because Gray et al. (2005) discovered that killing RIM increases the rate of spontaneous reversals but decreases the rate of spontaneous turns during dispersal in isotropic environments, whereas killing AVA decreases the rate of spontaneous reversals. To facilitate our own RIM and AVA laser killing, we used a transgenic animal that expresses GFP in these neurons. In control experiments with this transgenic animal, we found that 60° step rotations of the electric field evoked turns and reversals with wild-type proportions but that step rotations would also occasionally evoke stalls. During stalls, worms stop crawling altogether and twitch irregularly in place for ≥10 s before resuming crawling in the new direction. We found that killing RIM or AVA in the transgenic animals led to more stalls. Killing RIM reduced the use of turns, killing RIM reduced the use of reversals, and killing both RIM and AVA reduced both the use of turns and reversals. In each case, the increase in stalls was commensurate to the reduction in turns or reversals (Fig. 7 A).
To study the suppression of reorientation maneuvers after the worm becomes properly oriented, we tracked worm movement in fixed electric fields. First, we studied the contribution of the AIY neuron, because lesions of AIY have been shown to increase the rates of spontaneous turns and reversals during dispersal in isotropic environments (Tsalik and Hobert, 2003; Wakabayashi et al., 2004; Gray et al., 2005). We used the mutant ttx-3(ks5) in which AIY does not develop normally (Hobert et al., 1997), and we also laser killed the AIY neurons in a GFP-expressing transgenic strain. We verified previous observations that both the ttx-3 mutant and AIY-killed worms exhibit frequent spontaneous reorientation in isotropic environments. In the absence of an electric field, neither worm is able to sustain forward crawls for appreciable distances. But, when exposed to strong electric fields, both worms suppress spontaneous turns and reversals and crawl unmistakably, although more slowly, than wild-type worms, in the direction of the negative pole (Fig. 7 B). A specific mutation of a glutamate receptor, GLR-1(A/T), also increases the rate of spontaneous reorientation in isotropic environments. The GLR-1(A/T) receptor works by depolarizing several neurons including AVA and RIM that would express the wild-type receptor (Zheng et al., 1999). Like worms with AIY disruptions, GLR-1(A/T) mutant worms are unable to sustain forward movement in isotropic environments. But placed in an electric field, GLR-1(A/T) mutant worms suppress reorientation maneuvers and crawl toward the negative pole (Fig. 7 B).
We also examined whether the AIY interneuron and the GLR-1(A/T) mutation, because they affect the rate of spontaneous reorientation maneuvers, affect the threshold of electrosensory behavior or the utilization of turns and maneuvers during electrosensory steering. The threshold for electrosensory behavior for wild-type worms is ∼3 V/cm. We found that GLR-1(A/T) worms exhibit nearly the same threshold for electrosensory behavior as wild-type worms. Interestingly, ttx-3 mutant worms appear to exhibit a lower threshold, becoming oriented by electric fields as weak as 1.5 V/cm (11 of 22 ttx-3 mutant worms were oriented by a 1.5 V/cm electric field, whereas 0 of 16 wild-type worms were oriented; p < 0.05).
Finally, we studied the use of turns and reversals of AIY-disrupted and GLR-1(A/T) worms during electrosensory steering. In the absence of an electric field, the ttx-3 mutation not only increases the overall rate of spontaneous reorientation maneuvers but also the fraction that are turns: of spontaneous reorientation maneuvers that are >45°, 30% are turns for wild type (n = 11 worms) and 45% are turns for ttx-3(ks5) mutants (n = 13 worms) (p < 0.05). In experiments using 60° step rotations of the electric field, the ttx-3(ks5) mutation increased the likelihood of stalls, whereas killing AIY reduced the use of reversals, but neither significantly increased the use of turns (Fig. 7 A). Thus, lesions to the AIY interneuron appear to have a greater effect on the utilization of sudden turns during spontaneous behavior than during electrosensory steering. The GLR-1(A/T) mutation significantly affects motor choice during electrosensory steering. The GLR-1(A/T) mutation elevates the rate of spontaneous reversals in isotropic environments. In response to step rotations of the electric field, the GLR-1(A/T) mutant animals are significantly more likely than wild-type worms to use reversals than turns to reorient themselves (Fig. 7 A).
A neural circuit for electrosensory behavior
Our observations show that electrosensory behavior has a neural basis and that its components may be encoded in the hierarchical structure of the nervous system. First, sensory neurons must detect the direction and strength of the electric field. Next, downstream neurons must decide which type of reorientation maneuver to use to correct the worm's alignment. Finally, command motor neurons must execute the motor decisions. Based on the wiring diagram of the C. elegans nervous system (White et al., 1986), we have begun to sketch simple circuits (Fig. 8) that might drive electrosensory detection, decision making, and steering. Based on physiological measurements and laser-killing experiments, we suggest that ASJ and ASH play prominent roles in electrosensory detection. We have shown that RIM and AVA contribute to the execution of turns and reversals during electrosensory steering. In Figure 8, we indicate parts of the C. elegans wiring diagram that might connect ASJ and ASH to the RIM and AVA motor neurons during electrosensory behavior. We also include neurons that have been implicated in the execution of turns and reversals during exploratory behavior (Tsalik and Hobert, 2003; Wakabayashi et al., 2004; Gray et al., 2005), alluding to the likely overlap between the neural circuits for electrosensory behavior and other forms of navigational behavior.
Electrosensory behavior is almost certainly distributed over a much larger neural circuit than shown in Figure 8. However, we do suggest that the AIY interneuron, which is excluded from Figure 8, might not contribute significantly to electrosensory behavior. AIY is postsynaptic to chemosensory and thermosensory neurons and has been implicated in the neural circuits that mediate exploratory movement (Tsalik and Hobert, 2003; Wakabayashi et al., 2004; Gray et al., 2005). AIY is not synaptically connected to ASJ or ASH, which had the strongest contributions to electrosensory behavior of the sensory neurons that we studied. The ttx-3(ks5) mutation to AIY does not significantly affect electrosensory behavior, except to lower the electric field threshold. One possibility is that in worms with intact AIY interneurons, the response to weak electric fields is actually disrupted by AIY output, because it mediates stochastic movements and exploratory behavior. Thus, removing the AIY interneuron may lower the threshold for electrosensory behavior, as we have observed.
Discussion
To map navigational behaviors in C. elegans to the structure and function of sensorimotor pathways, it is necessary to develop algorithmic models of behavior, as stepwise transformations of sensory inputs into motor outputs. It is essential to know how specific sensory neurons represent stimulus inputs as patterns in neural activity and how downstream neurons use sensory information to calculate and execute motor decisions. Electrosensory behavior in C. elegans provides a powerful system to dissect the sensorimotor circuits that transform a precisely definable sensory input into quantifiable motor output. The extraordinary robustness of electrosensory behavior in C. elegans is striking, given its lack of obvious ecological relevance: C. elegans lives in soil where it is unlikely to encounter strong or stable electric fields. One possibility is that parasitic cousins of C. elegans might use electrotaxis when navigating strong electric fields in host tissue. Electric fields within the range of C. elegans electrosensory behavior are commonly found in the organs of larger animals (Nuccitelli, 1992). It has been suggested that Trichinella spiralis, a nematode that preferentially infects skeletal muscles and exhibits electrotaxis in in vitro assays, might detect the difference between different muscle types based on electrosensory cues (Hughes and Harley, 1977). Thus, C. elegans electrosensory behavior may have evolved as a strategy for nematode parasites to exploit directional cues inside their hosts.
For our point of view, electrosensory behavior in C. elegans provides a robust tool for analyzing the function of sensorimotor circuits as they transform a precisely definable sensory input into movement decisions. The quantifiable patterns of electrosensory behavior allow straightforward decomposition of navigation into distinct stages and operations. First, the worm must sense both the direction and magnitude of an electric field. Next, the worm must decide whether to use a turn or reversal to reorient itself to a favorable orientation in the electric field. After actuating the reorientation maneuver, the worm must suppress further reorientation maneuvers to maintain its correct alignment. Using physiological measurements as well as by quantifying the effects of defined genetic and physical lesions to the C. elegans nervous system, we should be able to pinpoint how these sensorimotor operations are performed by specific pathways and neural circuits. Here, we discuss these sensorimotor operations and neuronal correlates.
To effect deterministic steering during electrosensory behavior, C. elegans must be able to detect both the direction and amplitude of an electric field. We have shown that a subset of the amphid sensory neurons can detect electric fields in the range of electrosensory behavior and that genetic or laser ablation disruption of these neurons reduces the fidelity of electrosensory behavior. Interestingly, these amphid sensory neurons (ASJ and ASH, in particular) are most strongly stimulated when the worm is pointing toward the positive pole. One possibility is that worms orient their movements toward the negative pole in an attempt to lower the activity of these sensory neurons. As far as we know, this is the first demonstration that the ASJ neuron might play a role in navigational behavior. ASJ also responds to environmental cues in the developmental decision to exit the dauer-larval stage (Bargmann and Horvitz, 1991). The ASH neuron has been implicated in several nociceptive reflexes: evoking reversals to avoid nose touch, high osmolarity, and chemorepellants (Hart et al., 1999). Thus, it is interesting to note that ASH-mediated motor decisions, during reflexive avoidance and during electrosensory behavior, may be geared toward minimizing ASH activity.
When the worm detects its own misalignment in an electric field, it executes reorientation maneuvers to correct its alignment. Reorientation necessitates the motor decision to reorient using either a turn or reversal. In the end, either reorientation maneuver achieves the same goal, orienting the worm in the appropriate direction. Choice variability, the production of different, mutually exclusive behaviors when a nervous system is presented with identical stimuli, indicates a simple form of decision making. Another well studied example of choice variability in a sensorimotor system involves the medicinal leech, where stimulation of specific sensory inputs variably evokes swimming or crawling, a behavioral decision that can be biased by the activity of specific neurons (Briggman et al., 2005).
Our results suggest that choice variability in C. elegans electrotaxis, the decision to use either a turn or reversal to reorient in response to an electric field, is wired into specific interneuronal circuits. We suggest that killing either the RIM or AVA interneuron does not bias stimulus-evoked behavioral decision making but does affect the execution of the behavioral decision. Killing RIM, for example, does not affect the fraction of reversals that the worm uses to reorient itself to a step rotation of the electric field. We suggest that the increased numbers of stalls exhibited by RIM-killed worms may represent frustrated attempts to turn by using a missing neuronal pathway. In the same way, killing AVA does not affect the fraction of turns that the worm uses to reorient itself, and the increased numbers of stalls exhibited by AVA-killed worms may represent frustrated attempts to reverse. The simplest interpretation is that removing either the RIM or AVA interneurons does not affect an earlier decision to turn or reverse but does affect the worm's ability to execute either type of maneuver after the decision has been made. Because a portion of turns and reversals are executed normally after RIM or AVA or even both are killed, these neurons are apparently not always required to execute either maneuver. This points to parallel or redundant neural pathways for each maneuver that are capable of functioning correctly without either RIM or AVA. This observation also points to multiple stages in motor decision making. First, the worm has to decide whether to turn or reverse. If it decides to turn, then it has to decide whether to do so by using RIM or an RIM-independent pathway. If it decides to reverse, then it has to decide whether to do so by using an AVA or an AVA-independent pathway. We suggest that successive layers in the hierarchical organization of the worm's nervous system may perform successive stages in motor decision making (Fig. 8).
C. elegans electrosensory behavior has not received the attention that has been given to other navigational behaviors such as chemotaxis or thermotaxis. One reason may be that it was not known whether electrosensory behavior was actually programmed into the C. elegans nervous system. C. elegans is among a wide variety of motile cells and organisms that exhibit electrotaxis. These include bacteria (Adler and Shi, 1988), fungi (Gow, 1994), amoeba (Korohoda et al., 2000), the slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum (Zhao et al., 2002), and neuronal growth cones (Rajnicek et al., 1994). In most cases, the biological relevance of electrotaxis is uncertain. However, in many cases, the exquisite control of electrical stimulus inputs has provided a powerful probe of the signaling mechanisms that give rise to directional migration, mechanisms that converge with those of better-studied behavioral modalities such as chemotaxis. This study establishes electrotaxis in C. elegans as a direct product of its nervous system and as a highly accessible framework for understanding how a simple nervous system transforms patterns of sensory input into motor output during navigational behavior.
Fundamental questions remain. Why does the worm prefer to crawl at a specific angle to the electric field in strong electric fields? The mechanisms of electrosensory detection during navigation may be quite complex. The worm crawls in a snakelike undulating manner, so, in a fixed electric field, as the worm's nose swings from side to side with each undulation, the amphid sensory neurons should be driven into time-varying patterns of activity. The worm may be using the temporal variations in amphid sensory neuronal activity, not just their average level, when calculating movement decisions. To fully understand how the worm calculates movement decisions and executes reorientation maneuvers with precise angular size, we require a more complete map of the relevant sensorimotor circuits. Through systematic genetic and laser ablation analysis of the C. elegans nervous system, it should be possible to obtain a complete map of the neural circuits for electrotaxis. Because of recent developments in physiological imaging (Faumont and Lockery, 2006; Clark et al., 2007), it may soon be possible to quantify the operation of these neural circuits within freely moving worms as they navigate electric fields.
Footnotes
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This work was supported by the Sloan, McKnight, and National Science Foundations. We thank Winfield Hill (Rowland Institute at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA) for electronics, Gary Ruvkun for lending molecular biological resources to this effort, Cori Bargmann for suggesting the connection to parasitism, and Cynthia Chi and Tolulope Adesiyun for help with data collection.
- Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Aravinthan D. T. Samuel, Department of Physics and Center for Brain Science, Harvard University, 17 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138. samuel{at}physics.harvard.edu