Systems level circuit model of C. elegans undulatory locomotion: mathematical modeling and molecular genetics
Jan Karbowski, Gary Schindelman, Chris J. Cronin, Adeline Seah, Paul, W. Sternberg

TL;DR
This study combines molecular genetics and theoretical modeling to understand C. elegans locomotion, revealing the importance of stretch receptor feedback and neuromuscular coupling in generating undulatory movement.
Contribution
It introduces a systems level circuit model that explains locomotion patterns based on experimental data and highlights the role of stretch receptor feedback in C. elegans movement.
Findings
Anterior-to-posterior body bending gradients observed
Neuromuscular wavelength remains invariant
Frequency depends biphasically on synaptic signaling
Abstract
To establish the relationship between locomotory behavior and dynamics of neural circuits in the nematode C. elegans we combined molecular and theoretical approaches. In particular, we quantitatively analyzed the motion of C. elegans with defective synaptic GABA and acetylcholine transmission, defective muscle calcium signaling, and defective muscles and cuticle structures, and compared the data with our systems level circuit model. The major experimental findings are: (i) anterior-to-posterior gradients of body bending flex for almost all strains both for forward and backward motion, and for neuronal mutants, also analogous weak gradients of undulatory frequency, (ii) existence of some form of neuromuscular (stretch receptor) feedback, (iii) invariance of neuromuscular wavelength, (iv) biphasic dependence of frequency on synaptic signaling, and (v) decrease of frequency with increase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model Organisms · Circadian rhythm and melatonin · Spaceflight effects on biology
