CU Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
MCDB Home > faculty > FacultyPublications > HanMPublications > COG-2, a sox domain protein necessary fo ... ction in Caenorhabditis elegans
Document Actions

COG-2, a sox domain protein necessary fo ... ction in Caenorhabditis elegans


COG-2, a sox domain protein necessary for establishing a functional vulval-uterine connection in Caenorhabditis elegans.

17

In screens for mutants defective in vulval morphogenesis, multiple mutants were isolated in which the uterus and the vulva fail to make a proper connection. We describe five alleles that define the gene cog-2, for connection of gonad defective. To form a functional connection between the vulva and the uterus, the anchor cell must fuse with the multinucleate uterine seam cell, derived from uterine cells that adopt a (pi) lineage. In cog-2 mutants, the anchor cell does not fuse to the uterine seam cell and, instead, remains at the apex of the vulva, blocking the connection between the vulval and uterine lumens, resulting in an egg-laying defective phenotype. According to lineage analysis and expression assays for two (pi)-cell-specific markers, induction of the (pi) fate occurs normally in cog-2 mutants. We have cloned cog-2 and shown that it encodes a Sox family transcription factor that is expressed in the (pi) lineage. Thus, it appears that COG-2 is a transcription factor that regulates a late-stage aspect of uterine seam cell differentiation that specifically affects anchor cell-uterine seam cell fusion.


Hanna-Rose W, Han M

Development (Cambridge, England)

1999-01-01 00:00

126

1

169-79

Amino Acid Sequence,Animals,Base Sequence,Caenorhabditis elegans,Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins,Cell Differentiation,Cell Fusion,Cloning, Molecular,Female,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental,Helminth Proteins,Molecular Sequence Data,Mutation,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid,Transcription Factors,Uterus,Vulva,COG-2 protein, C elegans,Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins,Helminth Proteins,Transcription Factors

Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA

Development

NIGMS GM47869

0950-1991




472

True

9834196

University of Colorado Contact Us  |   Legal & Trademarks  |  Privacy