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Multiple subthreshold GPCR signals combined by the G proteins Gα q and Gα s activate the C. elegans egg-laying muscles.

Andrew C OlsonAllison M ButtNakeirah T M ChristieAshish ShelarMichael R Koelle
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2023)
Individual neurons or muscle cells express many G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) for neurotransmitters and neuropeptides, yet it remains unclear how cells integrate multiple GPCR signals that all must activate the same few G proteins. We analyzed this issue in the C. elegans egg-laying system, where multiple GPCRS on muscle cells promote contraction and egg laying. We genetically manipulated individual GPCRs and G proteins specifically in these muscle cells within intact animals and then measured egg laying and muscle calcium activity. Two serotonin GPCRs on the muscle cells, Gα q -coupled SER-1 and Gα s -coupled SER-7, together promote egg laying in response to serotonin. We found that signals produced by either SER-1/Gα q or SER-7/Gα s alone have little effect, but these two subthreshold signals combine to activate egg laying. We then transgenically expressed natural or designer GPCRs in the muscle cells and found that their subthreshold signals can also combine to induce muscle activity. However, artificially inducing strong signaling through just one of these GPCRs can be sufficient to induce egg laying. Knocking down Gα q and Gα s in the egg-laying muscle cells induced egg-laying defects that were stronger than those of a SER-1/SER-7 double knockout, indicating that additional endogenous GPCRs also activate the muscle cells. These results show that, in the egg-laying muscles, multiple GPCRs for serotonin and other signals each produce weak effects that individually do not result in strong behavioral outcomes. However, they combine to produce sufficient levels of Gα q and Gα s signaling to promote muscle activity and egg laying. Significance Statement: How can neurons and other cells gather multiple independent pieces of information from the soup of chemical signals in their environment and compute an appropriate response? Most cells express >20 G protein couple receptors (GPCRs) that each receive one signal and transmit that information through just ∼three types of G proteins. We analyzed how this machinery generates responses by studying the egg-laying system of C. elegans , where serotonin and multiple other signals act through GPCRs on the egg-laying muscles to promote muscle activity and egg laying. We found that individual GPCRs within an intact animal each generate effects too weak to activate egg laying. However, combined signaling from multiple GPCR types reaches a threshold capable of activating the muscle cells.
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