scholarly journals The Caenorhabditis elegans MYOD homologue HLH-1 is essential for proper muscle function and complete morphogenesis

Development ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 120 (6) ◽  
pp. 1631-1641 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Chen ◽  
M. Krause ◽  
M. Sepanski ◽  
A. Fire

A family of muscle-specific helix-loop-helix transcription factors (myoD, myogenin, myf-5 and MRF4) has been implicated in the control of vertebrate skeletal myogenesis. Searches for homologues of this family in Caenorhabditis elegans identified a single family member, hlh-1, which is expressed in striated muscles and their clonal precursors. We have isolated a null allele of hlh-1 following chemical mutagenesis. Animals homozygous for the null mutation produce contractile body-wall muscles, although muscle contractions are weak and coordination is defective. In addition to the evident muscle defects, mutant animals fail to complete embryonic elongation and die as larvae or young adults. Ultrastructural analysis of the mutant muscle reveals an apparently normal local lattice of thick and thin filaments, with more global defects in sarcomere organization and muscle cell placement. Mosaic studies using the point mutation and an extrachromosomal transgene indicate that the requirement for hlh-1 is fully zygotic, with no maternal hlh-1 requirement for either muscle development or viability.

Development ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 127 (10) ◽  
pp. 2041-2051 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.K. Corsi ◽  
S.A. Kostas ◽  
A. Fire ◽  
M. Krause

The basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factor Twist plays a role in mesodermal development in both invertebrates and vertebrates. In an effort to understand the role of the unique Caenorhabditis elegans Twist homolog, hlh-8, we analyzed mesodermal development in animals with a deletion in the hlh-8 locus. This deletion was predicted to represent a null allele because the HLH domain is missing and the reading frame for the protein is disrupted. Animals lacking CeTwist function were constipated and egg-laying defective. Both of these defects were rescued in transgenic mutant animals expressing wild-type hlh-8. Observing a series of mesoderm-specific markers allowed us to characterize the loss of hlh-8 function more thoroughly. Our results demonstrate that CeTwist performs an essential role in the proper development of a subset of mesodermal tissues in C. elegans. We found that CeTwist was required for the formation of three out of the four non-striated enteric muscles born in the embryo. In contrast, CeTwist was not required for the formation of the embryonically derived striated muscles. Most of the post-embryonic mesoderm develops from a single lineage. CeTwist was necessary for appropriate patterning in this lineage and was required for expression of two downstream target genes, but was not required for the expression of myosin, a marker of differentiation. Our results suggest that mesodermal patterning by Twist is an evolutionarily conserved function.


Author(s):  
Sumana Sundaramurthy ◽  
SarahBeth Votra ◽  
Arianna Laszlo ◽  
Tim Davies ◽  
David Pruyne

AbstractThe striated body wall muscles of Caenorhabditis elegans are a simple model system with well-characterized sarcomeres that have many vertebrate protein homologs. Previously, we observed deletion mutants for two formin genes, fhod-1 and cyk-1, developed thin muscles with abnormal dense bodies/sarcomere Z-lines. However, the nature of the cyk-1 mutation necessitated maternal CYK-1 expression for viability of the examined animals. Here, we tested the effects of complete loss of CYK-1 using a fast acting temperature-sensitive cyk-1(ts) mutant. Surprisingly, neither post-embryonic loss of CYK-1 nor acute loss of CYK-1 during embryonic sarcomerogenesis caused muscle defects, suggesting CYK-1 might not play a direct role in muscle development. Consistent with this, examination of cyk-1(Δ) mutants re-expressing CYK-1 in a mosaic pattern showed CYK-1 cannot rescue muscle defects in a muscle cell autonomous manner, suggesting muscle phenotypes caused by cyk-1 deletion are likely indirect. Conversely, mosaic re-expression of FHOD-1 in fhod-1(Δ) mutants promoted muscle cell growth, as well as proper Z-line organization, in a muscle cell autonomous manner. As we can observe no effect of loss of any other worm formin on muscle development, we conclude that FHOD-1 is the only formin that directly promotes striated muscle development in C. elegans.


1994 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 475-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
BD Williams ◽  
RH Waterston

By taking advantage of a lethal phenotype characteristic of Caenorhabditis elegans embryos that fail to move, we have identified 13 genes required for muscle assembly and function and discovered a new lethal class of alleles for three previously known muscle-affecting genes. By staining mutant embryos for myosin and actin we have recognized five distinct classes of genes: mutations in four genes disrupt the assembly of thick and thin filaments into the myofilament lattice as well as the polarized location of these components to the sarcolemma. Mutations in another three genes also disrupt thick and thin filament assembly, but allow proper polarization of lattice components based on the myosin heavy chain isoform that we analyzed. Another two classes of genes are defined by mutations with principal effects on thick or thin filament assembly into the lattice, but not both. The final class includes three genes in which mutations cause relatively minor defects in lattice assembly. Failure of certain mutants to stain with antibodies to specific muscle cell antigens suggest that two genes associated with severe disruptions of myofilament lattice assembly may code for components of the basement membrane and the sarcolemma that are concentrated where dense bodies (Z-line analogs) and M-lines attach to the cell membrane. Similar evidence suggests that one of the genes associated with mild effects on lattice assembly may code for tropomyosin. Many of the newly identified genes are likely to play critical roles in muscle development and function.


Genetics ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 137 (2) ◽  
pp. 483-498
Author(s):  
J Ahnn ◽  
A Fire

Abstract We have used available chromosomal deficiencies to screen for genetic loci whose zygotic expression is required for formation of body-wall muscle cells during embryogenesis in Caenorhabditis elegans. To test for muscle cell differentiation we have assayed for both contractile function and the expression of muscle-specific structural proteins. Monoclonal antibodies directed against two myosin heavy chain isoforms, the products of the unc-54 and myo-3 genes, were used to detect body-wall muscle differentiation. We have screened 77 deficiencies, covering approximately 72% of the genome. Deficiency homozygotes in most cases stain with antibodies to the body-wall muscle myosins and in many cases muscle contractile function is observed. We have identified two regions showing distinct defects in myosin heavy chain gene expression. Embryos homozygous for deficiencies removing the left tip of chromosome V fail to accumulate the myo-3 and unc-54 products, but express antigens characteristic of hypodermal, pharyngeal and neural development. Embryos lacking a large region on chromosome III accumulate the unc-54 product but not the myo-3 product. We conclude that there exist only a small number of loci whose zygotic expression is uniquely required for adoption of a muscle cell fate.


Development ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 121 (7) ◽  
pp. 2219-2232 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Schnabel

During the first four cleavage rounds of the Caenorhabditis elegans embryo, five somatic founder cells AB, MS, E, C and D are born, which later form the tissues of the embryo. The classical criterion for a cell-autonomous specification of a tissue is the capability of primordial cells to produce this tissue in isolation from the remainder of the embryo. By this criterion, the somatic founder cells MS, C and D develop cell-autonomously. Laser ablation experiments, however, reveal that within the embryonic context these blastomeres form a network of duelling cellular interactions. During normal development, the blastomere D inhibits muscle specification in the MS and the C lineage inhibits muscle specification in the D lineage. These inhibitory interactions are counteracted by two activating inductions. As described before the inhibition of body wall muscle in MS is counteracted by an activating signal from the ABa lineage. Body wall muscle in the D lineage is induced by MS descendants, which suppress an inhibitory activity of the C lineage. The interaction between the D and the MS lineage occurs through the C lineage. An interesting feature of these cell-cell interactions is that they do not serve to discriminate between equivalent cells but are permissive or nonpermissive inductions. No evidence was found that the C-derived body wall muscle also depends on an induction, which suggests that possibly three different pathways coexist in the early embryo to specify body wall muscle, two of which are, in different ways, influenced by cell-cell interactions and a third that is autonomous. This work supplies evidence that cells may acquire transient states during embryogenesis that influence the specification of other cells in the embryo. These states, however, may not be reflected in the developmental potentials of the cells themselves. They can only be scored indirectly by their action on the specification of other cells in the embryo. Blastomeres that behave cell-autonomously in isolation are nevertheless subjected to cell-cell interactions in the embryonic context. Why this should be is an intriguing question. The classical notion has been that blastomeres are specified autonomously in nematodes. In recent years, it was established that at least five inductions are required to determine the AB descendants of C. elegans, whereas the P1 descendants have been typically viewed to develop more autonomously. It appears now that inductions also play a major role during the determination of P1-derived blastomeres.


1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 1433-1439
Author(s):  
J A Barbas ◽  
J Galceran ◽  
L Torroja ◽  
A Prado ◽  
A Ferrús

The troponin I (TnI) gene of Drosophila melanogaster encodes a family of 10 isoforms resulting from the differential splicing of 13 exons. Four of these exons (6a1, 6a2, 6b1, and 6b2) are mutually exclusive and very similar in sequence. TnI isoforms show qualitative specificity whereby each muscle expresses a selected repertoire of them. In addition, TnI isoforms show quantitative specificity whereby each muscle expresses characteristic amounts of each isoform. In the mutant heldup3, the development of the thoracic muscles DLM, DVM, and TDT is aborted. The mutation consists of a one-nucleotide displacement of the 3' AG splice site at the intron preceding exon 6b1, resulting in the failure to produce all exon 6b1-containing TnI isoforms. These molecular changes in a constituent of the thin filaments cause the selective failure to develop the DLM, DVM, and TDT muscles while having no visible effect on other muscles wherein exon 6b1 expression is minor.


Development ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 124 (11) ◽  
pp. 2179-2189 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Krause ◽  
M. Park ◽  
J.M. Zhang ◽  
J. Yuan ◽  
B. Harfe ◽  
...  

The E proteins of mammals, and the related Daughterless (DA) protein of Drosophila, are ubiquitously expressed helix-loop-helix (HLH) transcription factors that play a role in many developmental processes. We report here the characterization of a related C. elegans protein, CeE/DA, which has a dynamic and restricted distribution during development. CeE/DA is present embryonically in neuronal precursors, some of which are marked by promoter activity of a newly described Achaete-scute-like gene hlh-3. In contrast, we have been unable to detect CeE/DA in CeMyoD-positive striated muscle cells. In vitro gel mobility shift analysis detects dimerization of CeE/DA with HLH-3 while efficient interaction of CeE/DA with CeMyoD is not seen. These studies suggest multiple roles for CeE/DA in C. elegans development and provide evidence that both common and alternative strategies have evolved for the use of related HLH proteins in controlling cell fates in different species.


Development ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 126 (20) ◽  
pp. 4525-4535 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Knirr ◽  
N. Azpiazu ◽  
M. Frasch

In the Drosophila embryo, a distinct class of myoblasts, designated as muscle founders, prefigures the mature pattern of somatic body wall muscles. Each founder cell appears to be instrumental in generating a single larval muscle with a defined identity. The NK homeobox gene S59 was the first of a growing number of proposed ‘identity genes’ that have been found to be expressed in stereotyped patterns in specific subsets of muscle founders and their progenitor cells and are thought to control their developmental fates. In the present study, we describe the effects of gain- and loss-of-function experiments with S59. We find that a null mutation in the gene encoding S59, which we have named slouch (slou), disrupts the development of all muscles that are derived from S59-expressing founder cells. The observed phenotypes upon mutation and ectopic expression of slouch include transformations of founder cell fates, thus confirming that slouch (S59) functions as an identity gene in muscle development. These fate transformations occur between sibling founder cells as well as between neighboring founders that are not lineage-related. In the latter case, we show that slouch (S59) activity is required cell-autonomously to repress the expression of ladybird (lb) homeobox genes, thereby preventing specification along the lb pathway. Together, these findings provide new insights into the regulatory interactions that establish the somatic muscle pattern.


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