Morphological and functional
recovery of the planarian photosensing system during head regeneration
Inoue T, Kumamoto H, Okamoto K, Umesono Y, Sakai M, Sanchez Alvarado A
and Agata K
Zoolog Sci 21(3):275-83 (2004)
SUMMARY
When exposed to light, planarians display a distinctive light avoidance
behavior known as negative phototaxis. Such behavior is temporarily suppressed
when animals are decapitated, and it is restored once the animals regenerate
their heads. Head regeneration and the simple but reproducible phototactic
response of planarians provides an opportunity to study the association
between neuronal differentiation and the establishment of behavior in
a simple, experimentally tractable metazoan. We have devised a phototaxis
assay system to analyze light response recovery during head regeneration
and determined that light evasion is markedly re-established 5 days after
amputation. Immunohistological and in situ hybridization studies indicate
that the photoreceptors and optic nerve connections to the brain begin
by the fourth day of cephalic regeneration. To experimentally manipulate
the light response recovery, we performed gene knockdown analysis using
RNA interference (RNAi) on two genes (1020HH and eye53) previously reported
to be expressed at 5 days after amputation and in the dorso-medial region
of the brain (where the optic nerves project). Although RNAi failed to
produce morphological defects in either the brain or the visual neurons,
the recovery of the phototactic response normally observed in 5-day regenerates
was significantly suppressed. The data suggest that 1020HH and eye53 may
be involved in the functional recovery and maintenance of the visual system,
and that the phototaxis assay presented here can be used to reliably quantify
the negative phototactic behavior of planarians.
LINK
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=15056922