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      Food and metabolic signalling defects in a Caenorhabditis elegans serotonin-synthesis mutant.

      Nature
      Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Behavior, Animal, Caenorhabditis elegans, enzymology, metabolism, physiology, Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins, Feeding Behavior, Gene Deletion, Helminth Proteins, Longevity, Molecular Sequence Data, Reproduction, Serotonin, Signal Transduction, Somatomedins, Transforming Growth Factor beta, Tryptophan Hydroxylase, genetics

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          Abstract

          The functions of serotonin have been assigned through serotonin-receptor-specific drugs and mutants; however, because a constellation of receptors remains when a single receptor subtype is inhibited, the coordinate responses to modulation of serotonin levels may be missed. Here we report the analysis of behavioural and neuroendocrine defects caused by a complete lack of serotonin signalling. Analysis of the C. elegans genome sequence showed that there is a single tryptophan hydroxylase gene (tph-1)-the key enzyme for serotonin biosynthesis. Animals bearing a tph-1 deletion mutation do not synthesize serotonin but are fully viable. The tph-1 mutant shows abnormalities in behaviour and metabolism that are normally coupled with the sensation and ingestion of food: rates of feeding and egg laying are decreased; large amounts of fat are stored; reproductive lifespan is increased; and some animals arrest at the metabolically inactive dauer stage. This metabolic dysregulation is, in part, due to downregulation of transforming growth factor-beta and insulin-like neuroendocrine signals. The action of the C. elegans serotonergic system in metabolic control is similar to mammalian serotonergic input to metabolism and obesity.

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