Movement inCaenorhabditis elegans is the result of sensory cues creating stimulatory and inhibitory output from sensory neurons. Four interneurons (AIA, AIB, AIY, and AIZ) are the primary recipients of this information that is further processed en route to motor neurons and muscle contraction. C. elegans has >1,000 G proteincoupled receptors (GPCRs), and their contribution to sensory-based movement is largely undefined. We show that an allatostatin/ galanin-like GPCR (NPR-9) is found exclusively in the paired AIB interneuron. AIB interneurons are associated with local search/ pivoting behavior. npr-9 mutants display an increased local search/ pivoting that impairs their ability to roam and travel long distances on food. With impaired roaming behavior on food npr-9 mutants accumulate more intestinal fat as compared with wild type. Overexpression of NPR-9 resulted in a gain-of-function phenotype that exhibits enhanced forward movement with lost pivoting behavior off food. As such the animal travels a great distance off food, creating arcs to return to food. These findings indicate that NPR-9 has inhibitory effects on the AIB interneuron to regulate foraging behavior, which, in turn, may affect metabolic rate and lipid storage.neuropeptide receptor ͉ nerve transmission ͉ foraging ͉ glutamate receptor ͉ interneuron A major challenge in neurobiology is to understand the control of behavior at the molecular level. Neuropeptides and their receptors offer promising candidates for the regulation of various behaviors and changes in physiology. The Caenorhabditis elegans genome sequence has allowed the identification of 109 putative neuropeptide genes encoding precursors that may be processed to Ϸ250 neuropeptides (1-3). These neuropeptides are grouped into three families: FMRFamide-related peptides (f lp), insulin-like peptides (ins), and neuropeptide-like-peptides (nlps). C. elegans expresses Ͼ1,000 orphan G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). More than 50 GPCRs resemble known receptors for known neuropeptide families based on phylogenetic comparisons with known vertebrate GPCRs (4). Of these GPCRs, based on sequence identity, C. elegans gene ZK455.3 expresses an nlp receptor, NPR-9, that is most similar to insect allatostatin/ mammalian galanin receptors (5-8). Allatostatins are a family of neuropeptides that share a conserved C-terminal sequence -Tyr/PheXaaPheGlyLeu-NH 2 and are widespread throughout the invertebrate lineage (9, 10). In insects, allatostatins regulate numerous physiological functions, including inhibition of juvenile hormone biosynthesis (11, 12), inhibition of muscle contraction (13), myoendocrine regulation (14, 15), neuromodulation (16), and regulation of enzymatic activities (17) and ecdysis (18). Similarly, mammalian galanin modulates a wide variety of processes that range from neurotransmission, nociception, feeding and metabolism, energy and osmotic homeostasis and learning and memory (19). We report that NPR-9 is uniquely localized in interneuron AIB to negatively regulate a variety of inputs th...