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mag-1, a homolog of Drosophila mago nash ... ation in Caenorhabditis elegans


mag-1, a homolog of Drosophila mago nashi, regulates hermaphrodite germ-line sex determination in Caenorhabditis elegans.

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The Caenorhabditis elegans gene mag-1 can substitute functionally for its homolog mago nashi in Drosophila and is predicted to encode a protein that exhibits 80% identity and 88% similarity to Mago nashi (P. A. Newmark et al., 1997, Development 120, 3197-3207). We have used RNA-mediated interference (RNAi) to analyze the phenotypic consequences of impairing mag-1 function in C. elegans. We show here that mag-1(RNAi) causes masculinization of the germ line (Mog phenotype) in RNA-injected hermaphrodites, suggesting that mag-1 is involved in hermaphrodite germ-line sex determination. Epistasis analysis shows that ectopic sperm production caused by mag-1(RNAi) is prevented by loss-of-function (lf) mutations in fog-2, gld-1, fem-1, fem-2, fem-3, and fog-1, all of which cause germ-line feminization in XX hermaphrodites, but not by a her-1(lf) mutation which causes germ-line feminization only in XO males. These results suggest that mag-1 interacts with the fog, fem, and gld genes and acts independently of her-1. We propose that mag-1 normally allows oogenesis by inhibiting function of one or more of these masculinizing genes, which act during the fourth larval stage to promote transient sperm production in the hermaphrodite germ line. When the Mog phenotype is suppressed by a fog-2(lf) mutation, mag-1(RNAi) also causes lethality in the progeny embryos of RNA-injected, mated hermaphrodites, suggesting an essential role for mag-1 during embryogenesis. The defective embryos arrest during morphogenesis with an apparent elongation defect. The distribution pattern of a JAM-1::GFP reporter, which is localized to boundaries of hypodermal cells, shows that hypodermis is disorganized in these embryos. The temporal expression pattern of the mag-1 gene prior to and during morphogenesis appears to be consistent with an essential role of mag-1 in embryonic hypodermal organization and elongation.


Li W, Boswell R, Wood WB

Developmental biology

2000-02-15 00:00

218

2

172-82

Animals,Caenorhabditis elegans,DNA, Complementary,Drosophila,Drosophila Proteins,Embryonic Development,Germ Cells,Hermaphroditism,Nuclear Proteins,Phenotype,Sex Determination (Genetics),DNA, Complementary,Drosophila Proteins,Mago protein, Drosophila,Nuclear Proteins

Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, 80309-0347, USA

Dev. Biol.

NICHD HD-11762

0012-1606

10.1006/dbio.1999.9593

S0012-1606(99)99593-3

119

True

10656761

Robert Boswell
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