eLife (Jun 2016)

Developmental programming modulates olfactory behavior in C. elegans via endogenous RNAi pathways

  • Jennie R Sims,
  • Maria C Ow,
  • Mailyn A Nishiguchi,
  • Kyuhyung Kim,
  • Piali Sengupta,
  • Sarah E Hall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.11642
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Environmental stress during early development can impact adult phenotypes via programmed changes in gene expression. C. elegans larvae respond to environmental stress by entering the stress-resistant dauer diapause pathway and resume development once conditions improve (postdauers). Here we show that the osm-9 TRPV channel gene is a target of developmental programming and is down-regulated specifically in the ADL chemosensory neurons of postdauer adults, resulting in a corresponding altered olfactory behavior that is mediated by ADL in an OSM-9-dependent manner. We identify a cis-acting motif bound by the DAF-3 SMAD and ZFP-1 (AF10) proteins that is necessary for the differential regulation of osm-9, and demonstrate that both chromatin remodeling and endo-siRNA pathways are major contributors to the transcriptional silencing of the osm-9 locus. This work describes an elegant mechanism by which developmental experience influences adult phenotypes by establishing and maintaining transcriptional changes via RNAi and chromatin remodeling pathways.

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