Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2040959 | Cell Reports | 2015 | 13 Pages |
•AWA sensory neurons and AIA interneurons are tuned to small odor increases•AWA has concentration- and history-dependent odor desensitization•Amplification and desensitization result in a stereotyped AIA response•AWA desensitization requires intraflagellar transport in cilia
SummaryAnimals have a remarkable ability to track dynamic sensory information. For example, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans can locate a diacetyl odor source across a 100,000-fold concentration range. Here, we relate neuronal properties, circuit implementation, and behavioral strategies underlying this robust navigation. Diacetyl responses in AWA olfactory neurons are concentration and history dependent; AWA integrates over time at low odor concentrations, but as concentrations rise, it desensitizes rapidly through a process requiring cilia transport. After desensitization, AWA retains sensitivity to small odor increases. The downstream AIA interneuron amplifies weak odor inputs and desensitizes further, resulting in a stereotyped response to odor increases over three orders of magnitude. The AWA-AIA circuit drives asymmetric behavioral responses to odor increases that facilitate gradient climbing. The adaptation-based circuit motif embodied by AWA and AIA shares computational properties with bacterial chemotaxis and the vertebrate retina, each providing a solution for maintaining sensitivity across a dynamic range.
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