Hunger affects the behavioral choices of all animals, and many chemosensory stimuli can be either attractive or repulsive depending on an animal’s hunger state. Although hunger-induced behavioral changes are well documented, the molecular and cellular mechanisms by which hunger modulates neural circuit function to generate changes in chemosensory valence are poorly understood. Here, we use the CO_2 response of the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to elucidate how hunger alters valence. We show that CO_2 response valence shifts from aversion to attraction during starvation, a change that is mediated by two pairs of interneurons in the CO_2 circuit, AIY and RIG. The transition from aversion to attraction is regulated by biogenic am...
Food availability and nutritional status are important cues affecting behavioral states. Here we rep...
Feeding behaviour is modulated by both environmental cues and internal physiological states. Appetit...
Hunger state can substantially alter the perceived value of a stimulus, even to the extent that the ...
Hunger affects the behavioral choices of all animals, and many chemosensory stimuli can be either at...
The valence of sensory stimuli (i.e. a measure of attractiveness or aversiveness that an animal atta...
The valence of sensory stimuli (i.e. a measure of attractiveness or aversiveness that an animal atta...
Many chemosensory stimuli evoke innate behavioral responses that can be either appetitive or aversiv...
Adaptability is essential to organisms’ fitness and survival. Evolutionary success depends on access...
Animals dramatically modify their chemosensory behaviors when starved, which could allow them to alt...
Many chemosensory cues evoke responses of the same valence under widely varying physiological condit...
Animals frequently exhibit the same behavior under different environmental or physiological conditio...
To accommodate complex and changing environmental conditions, animals have evolved mechanisms to mod...
CO_2 is both a critical regulator of animal physiology and an important sensory cue for many animals...
Feeding behaviour is modulated by both environmental cues and internal physiological states. Appetit...
CO_2 is both a critical regulator of animal physiology and an important sensory cue for many animals...
Food availability and nutritional status are important cues affecting behavioral states. Here we rep...
Feeding behaviour is modulated by both environmental cues and internal physiological states. Appetit...
Hunger state can substantially alter the perceived value of a stimulus, even to the extent that the ...
Hunger affects the behavioral choices of all animals, and many chemosensory stimuli can be either at...
The valence of sensory stimuli (i.e. a measure of attractiveness or aversiveness that an animal atta...
The valence of sensory stimuli (i.e. a measure of attractiveness or aversiveness that an animal atta...
Many chemosensory stimuli evoke innate behavioral responses that can be either appetitive or aversiv...
Adaptability is essential to organisms’ fitness and survival. Evolutionary success depends on access...
Animals dramatically modify their chemosensory behaviors when starved, which could allow them to alt...
Many chemosensory cues evoke responses of the same valence under widely varying physiological condit...
Animals frequently exhibit the same behavior under different environmental or physiological conditio...
To accommodate complex and changing environmental conditions, animals have evolved mechanisms to mod...
CO_2 is both a critical regulator of animal physiology and an important sensory cue for many animals...
Feeding behaviour is modulated by both environmental cues and internal physiological states. Appetit...
CO_2 is both a critical regulator of animal physiology and an important sensory cue for many animals...
Food availability and nutritional status are important cues affecting behavioral states. Here we rep...
Feeding behaviour is modulated by both environmental cues and internal physiological states. Appetit...
Hunger state can substantially alter the perceived value of a stimulus, even to the extent that the ...