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Pré-Publication, Document De Travail Année : 2021

Epigenetic regulation clocks the multigenerational olfactory imprinting in C. elegans

Résumé

Abstract Imprinting is an early sensory life experience that induces adult behaviours, such as mother recognition or homing. In a previous study, we demonstrated a striking olfactory imprinting in C. elegans that can be inherited over generations. When exposed to specific odorants during a timely controlled post-hatch period, C. elegans worms display during adulthood an enhanced migration towards these molecules. In order to unveil some of the genetic and epigenetic factors that are responsible for such a behavioural plasticity, we assessed the role of heterochronic genes using a candidate gene approach. We report here that translation of the Hunchback-Like 1 (HBL1) transcription factor in the sensory processing interneuron AIY, is a determining factor for olfactory plasticity timing in C . elegans . HBL1 may associate to the SPR1/CoREST co-repressor, the lysine demethylase SPR5/LSD1 and the histone deacetylase HDA3 to lengthen the plasticity period, whereas the translation initiation factor IFE-4 and the histone deacetylase HDA2 abridge it. We also observed that lengthened plasticity periods allow proportionally faster stable behavioral adaptation of C. elegans populations. We conclude that plasticity timing is a key factor, not only to transiently adapt individuals but also to stably adapt animal populations via multigenerational accumulation of experience.

Dates et versions

hal-03289915 , version 1 (19-07-2021)

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Madeleine Erard-Garcia, Diana Andrea Fernandes de Abreu, Antoine Gruet, Marie-Pierre Blanchard, Kevin Baranger, et al.. Epigenetic regulation clocks the multigenerational olfactory imprinting in C. elegans. 2021. ⟨hal-03289915⟩
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