Monoamines and neuropeptides modulate neuronal excitability and synaptic strengths, shaping circuit activity to optimize behavioral output. In C. elegans, a pair of bipolar polymodal nociceptors, the ASHs, sense 1-octanol to initiate escape responses. In the present study, 1-octanol stimulated large increases in ASH Ca(2+), mediated by L-type voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels (VGCCs) in the cell soma and L-plus P/Q-type VGCCs in the axon, which were further amplified by Ca(2+) released from intracellular stores. Importantly, 1-octanol-dependent aversive responses were not inhibited by reducing ASH L-VGCC activity genetically or pharmacologically. Serotonin, an enhancer of 1-octanol avoidance, potentiated 1-octanol-dependent ASH depolarization measured electrophysiologically, but surprisingly, decreased the ASH somal Ca(2+) transients. These results suggest that ASH somal Ca(2+) transient amplitudes may not always be predictive of neuronal depolarization and synaptic output. Therefore, although increases in steady-state Ca(2+) can reliably indicate when neurons become active, quantitative relationships between Ca(2+) transient amplitudes and neuronal activity may not be as straightforward as previously anticipated.
Keywords: 1-octanol; 5-HT; ASH; C. elegans; Ca2+ dynamics; Ca2+ imaging; electrophysiology; neuromodulation; nociception.
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