Abstract

Janus kinase (JAK) and signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) signaling affect social aggregation, mood and psychiatric disorders, nociceptive and depressive behaviors. Olfactory dysfunction is one of the distinct symptoms of these behaviors, but function and mechanism of JAK and STAT in modulating olfaction remain largely unknown. Migratory locusts show olfactory preference for their own volatiles. We thus use this animal model to explore functions and mechanisms of JAK and STAT5B in mediating olfaction response to their own volatiles. Tissue distribution study shows that JAK and STAT5B express in antennae and brains, especially in antennal lobes and mushroom bodies in locust brains, and knockdown of these two genes by RNA interference (RNAi) in antennae and brains results in the loss of olfactory preference for locust volatiles, including chemical odorants indole and β-ionone. RNA-seq analysis reveals that JAK and STAT5B RNAi knockdown downregulates a functional class of transcripts in nucleoprotein complex, including heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein C (hnRNPC) and small nuclear ribonucleoprotein polypeptide F (SNRPF). HnRNPC and SNRPF mRNAs and proteins are also expressed in antennae and brains, and RNAi knockdown of these two genes reduces the percentage of locusts preferring volatiles, including chemical odorants indole and β-ionone. Furthermore, RNAi knockdown of dopamine receptor 1 (DopR1) results in the decrease of JAK mRNA level in antennae, and JAK/STAT5B, hnRNPC and SNRPF are required for dopamine receptor 1 (DopR1) to modulate olfactory preference for their own volatiles. This study confirms that JAK/STAT5B signaling modulates olfaction by affecting expression levels of hnRNPC and SNRPF, and this pathway is also required for DopR1 to modulate olfactory preference for their own volatiles. These findings highlight novel roles of JAK and STAT5B in modulating olfactory preference. This study provides novel insights into functional links among JAK/STAT5B signaling, RNA binding proteins and DopR1 underlying the modulation of olfactory behaviors.

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