Periodic Reporting for period 3 - FLEXPEPNET (Nervous system reprogramming by flexible neuropeptidergic networks)
Berichtszeitraum: 2024-01-01 bis 2025-06-30
The C. elegans nervous system is exquisitely suited to study how neuropeptides adapt behavior because it counts only 302 brain cells and a map detailing all physical connections between these neurons, or “connectome”, has been established. Indeed, the diversity of neuropeptides within the animal brain results in exceedingly complex and intertwined neuropeptide signaling networks that are difficult to study in the vertebrate brain. We will first map out the neuropeptide-receptor pathways and develop tools to visualize neuropeptide signaling within the C. elegans nervous system. This will allow us to characterize plasticity in the expression of neuropeptides and their receptors induced by long-term aversive experience with unprecedented detail. We will then determine the effects of this peptidergic network on the activity of neural circuits and animal behavior. By establishing how aversive experience alters the structure of neuropeptide signaling networks and the control of behavioral states in the roundworm, we expect to boost our understanding of how neuropeptidergic plasticity governs behaviors in all sorts of animal brains, even potentially human ones.