An apical junction protein antagonizes mechanosensitive calcium signaling to establish stochastic choices of olfactory neuron subtypes

root 提交于 周一, 03/16/2026 - 00:00
Mechanical forces regulate brain development and left-right body patterning. However, the role of mechanical signaling in brain lateralization remains unclear. In Caenorhabditis elegans, the left and right AWC olfactory neurons communicate via a gap junction network to stochastically differentiate into the default AWCOFF and induced AWCON subtypes. SLO BK potassium channels, SLO-1 and SLO-2, act redundantly to inhibit a calcium-regulated protein kinase pathway in the specification of the AWCON subtype. Here, we identified a role for AJM-1 (apical junction molecule 1) in promoting AWCON from an unbiased forward genetic screen for mutants that suppress the slo-1(gf) 2AWCON phenotype. AJM-1 is located at three distinct tight junctions between amphid neurons (including AWC) and sheath glia, sheath and socket glia, and socket glia and hypodermal cells (also known as epidermal cells) at the anterior tip of the animal. In addition to its cell-autonomous function, the non-cell-autonomous function of AJM-1 in glial and hypodermal cells is required for the specification of the AWCON subtype. Furthermore, we identified a role for the DEL-1 mechanosensitive DEG/ENaC channel in the calcium signaling pathway, mediated by UNC-2 and EGL-19 voltage-activated calcium channels, that specifies AWCOFF. Together, our results suggest a mechanism in which AJM-1 promotes SLO-1 expression and antagonizes mechanosensitive calcium signaling, thereby promoting the AWCON subtype. This study provides insight into the role of mechanical force in the stochastic lateralization of olfactory neurons.