2022年3月7日
Salk scientists surprised to discover flexible decision-making capabilities in a worm with just 302 neurons
Salk scientists surprised to discover flexible decision-making capabilities in a worm with just 302 neurons
LA JOLLA—How does an animal make decisions? Scientists have spent decades trying to answer this question by focusing on the cells and connections of the brain that might be involved. Salk scientists are taking a different approach—analyzing behavior, not neurons. They were surprised to find that worms can take multiple factors into account and choose between two different actions, despite having only 302 neurons compared to approximately 86 billion in humans.

研究发现,发表于 当代生物学 on March 7, 2022, have important implications for the way researchers assess motivation and cognitive abilities in animals. What’s more, the study demonstrates that complex decision-making capabilities could be encoded in small biological and artificial networks.
“Our study shows you can use a simple system such as the worm to study something complex, like goal-directed decision-making. We also demonstrated that behavior can tell us a lot about how the brain works,” says senior author 斯里坎特·查拉萨尼, associate professor in Salk’s Molecular Neurobiology Laboratory. “Even simple systems like worms have different strategies, and they can choose between those strategies, deciding which one works well for them in a given situation. That provides a framework for understanding how these decisions are made in more complex systems, such as humans.”
Whether eating prey or defending its food source, the predatory worm Pristionchus pacificus relies on biting. The team’s challenge was to determine the worm’s intentions when it bites.
The researchers found that P. pacificus chooses between two foraging strategies for biting its prey and competitor, another worm called Caenorhabditis elegans: 1) predatory strategy, in which its goal for biting is to kill prey, or 2) territorial strategy, in which biting is instead used to force 秀丽隐杆线虫 away from a food source. P. pacificus chooses the predatory strategy against larval 秀丽隐杆线虫, which is easy to kill. In contrast, P. pacificus selects the territorial strategy against adult 秀丽隐杆线虫, which is difficult to kill and outcompetes P. pacificus for food.

To the team, it appeared that P. pacificus weighed the costs and benefits of multiple potential outcomes of an action—behavior that’s familiar in vertebrates but unexpected in a worm.
“Scientists have always assumed that worms were simple—when P. pacificus bites we thought that was always for a singular predatory purpose,” says first author Kathleen Quach, a postdoctoral fellow in Chalasani’s lab. “Actually, P. pacificus is versatile and can use the same action, biting 秀丽隐杆线虫, to achieve different long-term goals. I was surprised to find that P. pacificus could leverage what seemed like failed predation into successful and goal-directed territoriality.”
In the future, the scientists would like to determine which of P. pacificus’ cost-benefit calculations are hard-wired or flexible. They hope more research like this will help further uncover the molecular underpinnings of decision-making.
The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health (5R01MH113905), the W.M. Keck Foundation, the National Science Foundation, Salk Women & Science and a Paul F. Glenn Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship.
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.02.033
日记
当代生物学
作者
Kathleen T. Quach & Sreekanth H. Chalasani
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电话:(858) 453-4100
press@salk.edu
萨尔克研究所是一个独立的非营利性研究机构,由首个安全有效的脊髓灰质炎疫苗的研发者乔纳斯·索尔克于1960年创立。该研究所的使命是推动以合作、敢于冒险为特点的基础性研究,以应对癌症、阿尔茨海默病和农业脆弱性等社会最紧迫的挑战。这项基础科学支撑着所有的转化研究,产生有助于全球新药和创新的见解。.