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Diverse chromatin remodeling genes antag ... ed SynMuv pathways in C elegans


Diverse chromatin remodeling genes antagonize the Rb-involved SynMuv pathways in C. elegans.

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In Caenorhabditis elegans, vulval cell-fate specification involves the activities of multiple signal transduction and regulatory pathways that include a receptor tyrosine kinase/Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway and synthetic multivulva (SynMuv) pathways. Many genes in the SynMuv pathways encode transcription factors including the homologs of mammalian Rb, E2F, and components of the nucleosome-remodeling deacetylase complex. To further elucidate the functions of the SynMuv genes, we performed a genome-wide RNA interference (RNAi) screen to search for genes that antagonize the SynMuv gene activities. Among those that displayed a varying degree of suppression of the SynMuv phenotype, 32 genes are potentially involved in chromatin remodeling (called SynMuv suppressor genes herein). Genetic mutations of two representative genes (zfp-1 and mes-4) were used to further characterize their positive roles in vulval induction and relationships with Ras function. Our analysis revealed antagonistic roles of the SynMuv suppressor genes and the SynMuv B genes in germline-soma distinction, RNAi, somatic transgene silencing, and tissue specific expression of pgl-1 and the lag-2/Delta genes. The opposite roles of these SynMuv B and SynMuv suppressor genes on transcriptional regulation were confirmed in somatic transgene silencing. We also report the identifications of ten new genes in the RNAi pathway and six new genes in germline silencing. Among the ten new RNAi genes, three encode homologs of proteins involved in both protein degradation and chromatin remodeling. Our findings suggest that multiple chromatin remodeling complexes are involved in regulating the expression of specific genes that play critical roles in developmental decisions.


Cui M, Kim EB, Han M

PLoS genetics

2006-05-01 00:00

2

5

e74

Animals,Caenorhabditis elegans,Cell Lineage,Chromatin,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental,Gene Silencing,Genome,Humans,Models, Genetic,Mutation,Phenotype,RNA Interference,Retinoblastoma Protein,Transgenes,Chromatin,Retinoblastoma Protein

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

PLoS Genet.

NIGMS GM47869

1553-7404

10.1371/journal.pgen.0020074


480

True

16710447

Mingxue Cui
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