Access
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).
Letters to Nature
Nature 378, 82-85 (2 November 1995) | doi:10.1038/378082a0; Accepted 18 August 1995
Synaptic code for sensory modalities revealed by C. elegans GLR-1 glutamate receptor
Anne C. Hart, Shannon Sims & Joshua M. Kaplan*
- Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital, 50 Blossom Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, and Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA
- * To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
How does the nervous system encode environmental stimuli as sensory experiences? Both the type (visual, olfactory, gustatory, mechanical or auditory) and the quality of a stimulus (spatial position, intensity or frequency) are represented as a neural code. Here we undertake a genetic analysis of sensory modality coding in Caenorhabditis elegans. The ASH sensory neurons respond to two distinct sensory stimuli (nose touch and osmotic stimuli). A mutation in the glr-1 (glutamate receptor) gene eliminates the response to nose touch but not to osmotic repellents. The predicted GLR-1 protein is roughly 40% identical to mammalian AMPA-class glutamate receptor (GluR) subunits. Analysis of glr-1 expression and genetic mosaics indicates that GLR-1 receptors act in synaptic targets of the ASH neurons. We propose that discrimination between the ASH sensory modalities arises from differential release of ASH neurotransmitters in response to different stimuli.
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).
