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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Modulation of gene expression in the embryonic digestive tract of C. elegans.

The Caenorhabditis elegans digestive tract is composed of four distinct modules derived from separate cell lineages: anterior pharynx from the ABa lineage, posterior pharynx from the MS lineage, gut from the E lineage, and rectum from the ABp lineage. The C. elegans gut esterase gene (ges-1) is normally expressed in the embryonic gut or E lineage. However, expression ges-1 can be switched into cells of the embryonic pharynx and tail by virtue of deleting a tandem pair of WGATAR sites in the ges-1 promoter. Here, we use both laser ablation experiments and genetic analysis to show that cells expressing the WGATAR-deleted ges-1 transgene belong to all three nongut lineages of the digestive tract: ABa, MS, and ABp. We also show that the molecular size and spatial distribution of ges-1 mRNA transcripts produced by either the WGATAR-deleted ges-1 transgene or the undeleted ges-1 control transgene appear correctly regulated, suggesting that the spatial switch in ges-1 expression occurs at the level of transcription initiation. We further show that both the WGATAR-deleted and the undeleted ges-1 transgenes respond appropriately to mutations in a series of maternal effect genes (skn-1, mex-1, pie-1, and pop-1) that alter early blastomere fate. Moreover, the pharynx/tail expression of the WGATAR-deleted ges-1 transgene is abolished by mutations in the zygotic gene pha-4. Finally, we use imprecise transposon excision to produce two independent C. elegans strains with 1- to 2-kb deletions that remove the tandem WGATAR sites from the promoter of the endogenous chromosomal ges-1 gene: in both of these strains, ges-1 is not expressed in the embryonic gut but is expressed in cells of the embryonic pharynx; pharynx expression is weak but incontrovertible. Overall, our results validate previous transgenic analysis of ges-1 control and show further that ges-1 appears to be regulated in a system-specific, rather than a lineage-specific, manner. The multiple facets of ges-1 expression provide an opportunity to investigate how a multicomponent organ system such as the digestive tract is established from diverse cell lineages.[1]

References

  1. Modulation of gene expression in the embryonic digestive tract of C. elegans. Fukushige, T., Schroeder, D.F., Allen, F.L., Goszczynski, B., McGhee, J.D. Dev. Biol. (1996) [Pubmed]
 
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