CGC Bibliography Paper 5274

A Caenorhabditis elegans pheromone antagonizes volatile anesthetic action through a Go-coupled pathway.

van Swinderen B, Metz LB, Shebester LD, Crowder CM

Medline:
12019227
Citation:
Genetics 161: 109-119 2002
Type:
ARTICLE
Genes:
bas-1 cat-2 cat-4 che-2 che-3 che-11 che-13 daf-1 daf-3 daf-4 daf-5 daf-7 daf-8 daf-10 daf-11 daf-12 daf-21 daf-22 eat-16 egl-10 egl-30 glr-1 goa-1 gpb-2 osm-1 osm-3 osm-5 osm-6 ric-4 sag-1 snb-1 unc-25 unc-49 unc-64
Abstract:
Volatile anesthetics (VAs) disrupt nervous system function by an ill-defined mechanism with no known specific antagonists. During the course of characterizing the response of the nematode C. elegans to VAs, we discovered that a C. elegans pheromone antagonizes the VA halothane. Acute exposure to pheromone rendered wild-type C. elegans resistant to clinical concentrations of halothane, increasing the EC50 from 0,43 +/- 0.03 to 0.90 +/- 0.02. C. elegans mutants that disrupt the function of sensory neurons required for the action of the previously characterized dauer pheromone blocked pheromone induced resistance (Pir) to halothane. Pheromone preparations from loss-of-function mutants of daf-22, a gene required for dauer pheromone production, lacked the halothane-resistance activity, suggesting that dauer and Pir pheromone are identical. However, the pathways for pheromone's effects on dauer formation and VA action were not identical. Not all mutations that alter dauer formation affected the Pir phenotype. Further, mutations in genes not known to be involved in dauer formation completely blocked Pir, including those altering signaling through the G proteins Goalpha and Gqalpha. A model in which sensory neurons transduce the pheromone activity through antagonistic Go and Gq pathways, modulating VA action against neurotransmitter release machinery, is proposed.