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Dive into the research topics where Marina Ezcurra is active.

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Featured researches published by Marina Ezcurra.


Nature | 2008

Functional asymmetry in Caenorhabditis elegans taste neurons and its computational role in chemotaxis.

Hiroshi Suzuki; Tod R. Thiele; Serge Faumont; Marina Ezcurra; Shawn R. Lockery; William R. Schafer

Chemotaxis in Caenorhabditis elegans, like chemotaxis in bacteria, involves a random walk biased by the time derivative of attractant concentration, but how the derivative is computed is unknown. Laser ablations have shown that the strongest deficits in chemotaxis to salts are obtained when the ASE chemosensory neurons (ASEL and ASER) are ablated, indicating that this pair has a dominant role. Although these neurons are left–right homologues anatomically, they exhibit marked asymmetries in gene expression and ion preference. Here, using optical recordings of calcium concentration in ASE neurons in intact animals, we demonstrate an additional asymmetry: ASEL is an ON-cell, stimulated by increases in NaCl concentration, whereas ASER is an OFF-cell, stimulated by decreases in NaCl concentration. Both responses are reliable yet transient, indicating that ASE neurons report changes in concentration rather than absolute levels. Recordings from synaptic and sensory transduction mutants show that the ON–OFF asymmetry is the result of intrinsic differences between ASE neurons. Unilateral activation experiments indicate that the asymmetry extends to the level of behavioural output: ASEL lengthens bouts of forward locomotion (runs) whereas ASER promotes direction changes (turns). Notably, the input and output asymmetries of ASE neurons are precisely those of a simple yet novel neuronal motif for computing the time derivative of chemosensory information, which is the fundamental computation of C. elegans chemotaxis. Evidence for ON and OFF cells in other chemosensory networks suggests that this motif may be common in animals that navigate by taste and smell.


The EMBO Journal | 2011

Food sensitizes C. elegans avoidance behaviours through acute dopamine signalling

Marina Ezcurra; Yoshinori Tanizawa; Peter Swoboda; William R. Schafer

Many behavioural states are modulated by food availability and nutritional status. Here, we report that in Caenorhabditis elegans, the presence of an external food source enhances avoidance responses to soluble repellents sensed by the polymodal ASH neurons. This enhancement requires dopamine signalling and is mimicked by exogenous dopamine. Food modulation is dependent on the mechanosensory cilia of the dopaminergic neurons, indicating that dopamine is released in response to sensation of bacteria. Activation of the dopamine neurons leads within seconds to a transient state of increased sensory acuity. In vivo imaging experiments indicate that this dopamine‐dependent sensitization results in part from modality‐specific increases in the magnitude and duration of gustatory responses in the ASH neurons. The D1‐like dopamine receptor DOP‐4 acts cell autonomously in ASH to mediate effects on response magnitude. Thus, dopamine functions as a direct signal of the presence of food to control context‐dependent behavioural states.


Current Opinion in Pharmacology | 2013

Molecular mechanisms of incretin hormone secretion.

Marina Ezcurra; Frank Reimann; Fiona M. Gribble; Edward C. Emery

Highlights • Fluorescent tagging enables detailed analysis of enteroendocrine cell physiology.• Electrogenic nutrient uptake evokes electrical activity and hormone secretion.• G protein coupled receptors play key roles in lipid stimulated incretin secretion.• Targeting enteroendocrine cells is under investigation to treat diabetes and obesity.


The EMBO Journal | 2008

A glial DEG/ENaC channel functions with neuronal channel DEG-1 to mediate specific sensory functions in C. elegans

Ying Wang; Alfonso Apicella; Sun Kyung Lee; Marina Ezcurra; Robert D. Slone; Maya Goldmit; William R. Schafer; Shai Shaham; Monica Driscoll; Laura Bianchi

Mammalian neuronal DEG/ENaC channels known as ASICs (acid‐sensing ion channels) mediate sensory perception and memory formation. ASICS are closed at rest and are gated by protons. Members of the DEG/ENaC family expressed in epithelial tissues are called ENaCs and mediate Na+ transport across epithelia. ENaCs exhibit constitutive activity and strict Na+ selectivity. We report here the analysis of the first DEG/ENaC in Caenorhabditis elegans with functional features of ENaCs that is involved in sensory perception. ACD‐1 (acid‐sensitive channel, degenerin‐like) is constitutively open and impermeable to Ca2+, yet it is required with neuronal DEG/ENaC channel DEG‐1 for acid avoidance and chemotaxis to the amino acid lysine. Surprisingly, we document that ACD‐1 is required in glia rather than neurons to orchestrate sensory perception. We also report that ACD‐1 is inhibited by extracellular and intracellular acidification and, based on the analysis of an acid‐hypersensitive ACD‐1 mutant, we propose a mechanism of action of ACD‐1 in sensory responses based on its sensitivity to protons. Our findings suggest that channels with ACD‐1 features may be expressed in mammalian glia and have important functions in controlling neuronal function.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2016

Neuropeptidergic Signaling and Active Feeding State Inhibit Nociception in Caenorhabditis elegans

Marina Ezcurra; Denise S. Walker; Isabel Beets; Peter Swoboda; William R. Schafer

Food availability and nutritional status are important cues affecting behavioral states. Here we report that, in Caenorhabditis elegans, a cascade of dopamine and neuropeptide signaling acts to inhibit nociception in food-poor environments. In the absence of food, animals show decreased sensitivity and increased adaptation to soluble repellents sensed by the polymodal ASH nociceptors. The effects of food on adaptation are affected by dopamine and neuropeptide signaling; dopamine acts via the DOP-1 receptor to decrease adaptation on food, whereas the neuropeptide receptors NPR-1 and NPR-2 act to increase adaptation off food. NPR-1 and NPR-2 function cell autonomously in the ASH neurons to increase adaptation off food, whereas the DOP-1 receptor controls neuropeptide release from interneurons that modulate ASH activity indirectly. These results indicate that feeding state modulates nociception through the interaction of monoamine and neuropeptide signaling pathways.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

A Seven-Transmembrane Receptor That Mediates Avoidance Response to Dihydrocaffeic Acid, a Water-Soluble Repellent in Caenorhabditis elegans

Reina Aoki; Tatsurou Yagami; Hiroyuki Sasakura; Ken-ichi Ogura; Yasuhiro Kajihara; Masakazu Ibi; Takeaki Miyamae; Fumio Nakamura; Taro Asakura; Yoshikatsu Kanai; Yoshimi Misu; Yuichi Iino; Marina Ezcurra; William R. Schafer; Ikue Mori; Yoshio Goshima

The ability to detect harmful chemicals rapidly is essential for the survival of all animals. In Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans), repellents trigger an avoidance response, causing animals to move away from repellents. Dihydrocaffeic acid (DHCA) is a water-soluble repellent and nonflavonoid catecholic compound that can be found in plant products. Using a Xenopus laevis (X. laevis) oocyte expression system, we identified a candidate dihydrocaffeic acid receptor (DCAR), DCAR-1. DCAR-1 is a novel seven-transmembrane protein that is expressed in the ASH avoidance sensory neurons of C. elegans. dcar-1 mutant animals are defective in avoidance response to DHCA, and cell-specific expression of dcar-1 in the ASH neurons of dcar-1 mutant animals rescued the defect in avoidance response to DHCA. Our findings identify DCAR-1 as the first seven-transmembrane receptor required for avoidance of a water-soluble repellent, DHCA, in C. elegans.


Genetics | 2009

Worms With a Single Functional Sensory Cilium Generate Proper Neuron-Specific Behavioral Output

Gabriele Senti; Marina Ezcurra; Jana Löbner; William R. Schafer; Peter Swoboda

Studying the development and mechanisms of sensory perception is challenging in organisms with complex neuronal networks. The worm Caenorhabditis elegans possesses a simple neuronal network of 302 neurons that includes 60 ciliated sensory neurons (CSNs) for detecting external sensory input. C. elegans is thus an excellent model in which to study sensory neuron development, function, and behavior. We have generated a genetic rescue system that allows in vivo analyses of isolated CSNs at both cellular and systemic levels. We used the RFX transcription factor DAF-19, a key regulator of ciliogenesis. Mutations in daf-19 result in the complete absence of all sensory cilia and thus of external sensory input. In daf-19 mutants, we used cell-specific rescue of DAF-19 function in selected neurons, thereby generating animals with single, fully functional CSNs. Otherwise and elsewhere these animals are completely devoid of any environmental input through cilia. We demonstrated the rescue of fully functional, single cilia using fluorescent markers, sensory behavioral assays, and calcium imaging. Our technique, functional rescue in single sensory cilia (FRISSC), can thus cell-autonomously and cell-specifically restore the function of single sensory neurons and their ability to respond to sensory input. FRISSC can be adapted to many different CSNs and thus constitutes an excellent tool for studying sensory behaviors, both in single animals and in populations of worms. FRISSC will be very useful for the molecular dissection of sensory perception in CSNs and for the analysis of the developmental aspects of ciliogenesis.


Cell Reports | 2017

Nutritional Programming of Lifespan by FOXO Inhibition on Sugar-Rich Diets

Adam J. Dobson; Marina Ezcurra; Charlotte E. Flanagan; Adam C. Summerfield; Matthew D.W. Piper; David Gems; Nazif Alic

Summary Consumption of unhealthy diets is exacerbating the burden of age-related ill health in aging populations. Such diets can program mammalian physiology to cause long-term, detrimental effects. Here, we show that, in Drosophila melanogaster, an unhealthy, high-sugar diet in early adulthood programs lifespan to curtail later-life survival despite subsequent dietary improvement. Excess dietary sugar promotes insulin-like signaling, inhibits dFOXO—the Drosophila homolog of forkhead box O (FOXO) transcription factors—and represses expression of dFOXO target genes encoding epigenetic regulators. Crucially, dfoxo is required both for transcriptional changes that mark the fly’s dietary history and for nutritional programming of lifespan by excess dietary sugar, and this mechanism is conserved in Caenorhabditis elegans. Our study implicates FOXO factors, the evolutionarily conserved determinants of animal longevity, in the mechanisms of nutritional programming of animal lifespan.


npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease | 2018

A parthenogenetic quasi-program causes teratoma-like tumors during aging in wild-type C. elegans

Hongyuan Wang; Yuan Zhao; Marina Ezcurra; Alexandre Benedetto; Ann F. Gilliat; Josephine Hellberg; Ziyu Ren; Evgeniy R. Galimov; Trin Athigapanich; Johannes Girstmair; Maximilian J. Telford; Colin T. Dolphin; Zhizhou Zhang; David Gems

A long-standing belief is that aging (senescence) is the result of stochastic damage accumulation. Alternatively, senescent pathology may also result from late-life, wild-type gene action (i.e., antagonistic pleiotropy, as argued by Williams) leading to non-adaptive run-on of developmental programs (or quasi-programs) (as suggested more recently by Blagosklonny). In this study, we use existing and new data to show how uterine tumors, a prominent form of senescent pathology in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, likely result from quasi-programs. Such tumors develop from unfertilized oocytes which enter the uterus and become hypertrophic and replete with endoreduplicated chromatin masses. Tumor formation begins with ovulation of unfertilized oocytes immediately after exhaustion of sperm stocks. We show that the timing of this transition between program and quasi-program (i.e., the onset of senescence), and the onset of tumor formation, depends upon the timing of sperm depletion. We identify homology between uterine tumors and mammalian ovarian teratomas, which both develop from oocytes that fail to mature after meiosis I. In teratomas, futile activation of developmental programs leads to the formation of differentiated structures within the tumor. We report that older uterine tumors express markers of later embryogenesis, consistent with teratoma-like activation of developmental programs. We also present evidence of coupling of distal gonad atrophy to oocyte hypertrophy. This study shows how the Williams Blagosklonny model can provide a mechanistic explanation of this component of C. elegans aging. It also suggests etiological similarity between teratoma and some forms of senescent pathology, insofar as both are caused by quasi-programs.Aging: Runaway programs are a cause of agingThe main cause of disease worldwide is aging, a process long suspected to result from damage accumulation. However, new work from a team led by David Gems at University College London describes a different type of cause: quasi-programs, or the futile run-on biological programs in later life, supporting a recently proposed, alternative theory about aging. The study focuses on the short-lived worm C. elegans, which during aging develop very large tumors in the uterus. The authors show how such tumors develop due to futile attempts by unfertilized eggs to develop by switching on programs of embryogenesis. In mammals, similar runaway programs cause teratomas, a type of benign tumor of grotesque appearance. This work provides new insights about the nature of aging as a disease process, suggesting that it is to an extent teratoma-like.


Current Biology | 2018

C. elegans Eats Its Own Intestine to Make Yolk Leading to Multiple Senescent Pathologies

Marina Ezcurra; Alexandre Benedetto; Thanet Sornda; Ann F. Gilliat; Catherine Au; Qifeng Zhang; Sophie van Schelt; Alexandra L. Petrache; Hongyuan Wang; Yila de la Guardia; Shoshana Bar-Nun; Eleanor Tyler; Michael J. O. Wakelam; David Gems

Summary Aging (senescence) is characterized by the development of numerous pathologies, some of which limit lifespan. Key to understanding aging is discovery of the mechanisms (etiologies) that cause senescent pathology. In C. elegans, a major senescent pathology of unknown etiology is atrophy of its principal metabolic organ, the intestine. Here we identify a cause of not only this pathology but also of yolky lipid accumulation and redistribution (a form of senescent obesity): autophagy-mediated conversion of intestinal biomass into yolk. Inhibiting intestinal autophagy or vitellogenesis rescues both visceral pathologies and can also extend lifespan. This defines a disease syndrome leading to multimorbidity and contributing to late-life mortality. Activation of gut-to-yolk biomass conversion by insulin/IGF-1 signaling (IIS) promotes reproduction and senescence. This illustrates how major, IIS-promoted senescent pathologies in C. elegans can originate not from damage accumulation but from direct effects of futile, continued action of a wild-type biological program (vitellogenesis).

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William R. Schafer

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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David Gems

University College London

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Ann F. Gilliat

University College London

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Hongyuan Wang

University College London

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Yuan Zhao

University College London

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Catherine Au

University College London

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