1. C. elegans TAT-6, a putative aminophospholipid translocase, is expressed in sujc cells in the hermaphrodite gonad
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Nilsson, Lars, Rahmani, Shapour, and Tuck, Simon
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New Finding ,Cellbiologi ,viruses ,Biochemistry and Molecular Biology ,Cell Biology ,Biokemi och molekylärbiologi ,Expression Data ,C. Elegans - Abstract
tat-1 and tat-5 are both very broadly expressed in C. elegans (Lyssenko et al. 2008, Ruaud et al. 2009, Chen et al. 2010, Wehman et al. 2011). tat-2, tat-3 and tat-4 are also expressed in many cells and tissues although apparently not ubiquitously (Lyssenko et al. 2008). No reports exist presently describing the pattern in which tat-6 is expressed. We generated multiple transgenic lines containing a construct encoding the entire TAT-6 protein fused to GFP (Fig.1A,B). The construct contained tat-6 promoter sequences, all exons and introns as well as intragenic sequences to the left and right of the tat-6 coding region (Fig. 1A,B) (Sarov et al. 2012). Expression was seen in cells in the head and tail but in the center of the worm, expression was restricted to a proximal part of the gonad (Fig. 1C,F,G,H,I). Expression in the gonad was absent in early and mid-L4 stage worms but was robust in young adults (Fig. 1D,E,F,G). Prior to ovulation, fluorescence was seen in a region at the junction between the spermatheca and the uterus (Fig. 1C,F,G). In hermaphrodites in which ovulation had occurred, GFP fluorescence was seen partially surrounding the distal-most egg in the uterus (Fig.1H,I). The valve forming the junction between spermatheca and the uterus consists of a toroidal syncytium, sujn, and a core cell syncytium, sujc, which initially occupies the center of the valve (Fig. 1C) (Kimble and Hirsh 1979, Lints and Hall 2013). During the first ovulation, the core is displaced by the passage of the newly fertilized egg from the spermatheca to the uterus (Kimble and Hirsh 1979). The change in the distribution of TAT-6::GFP fluorescence we observed during the first ovulation suggested that TAT-6 might be expressed in sujc. Since existing GFP markers for cells in the spermatheca were available, to determine in which cells tat-6 was expressed, we first constructed strains containing a tat-6p::mCherry transcriptional reporter (Fig. 1B). The marker was expressed in the same way as the GFP reporter (Fig. 1S). In a strain containing the tat-6p::mCherry reporter and a reporter in which GFP expression was driven by promoter sequences from the cog-1 gene active in sujc (Palmer et al. 2002), the mCherry and GFP signals were seen in the same cell (Fig. 1M,N,O). In contrast, in a strain containing the tat-6p::mCherry reporter and an ipp-5p::gfp reporter, which is expressed in distal spermathecal cells that form part of the junction with the ovary (Bui and Sternberg 2002), the two fluorescent signals did not overlap (Fig. 1J,K,L). Similarly, in a strain containing the tat-6p::mCherry reporter and an let-502p::gfp reporter, which is strongly expressed in sujn cells (Wissmann et al. 1999), the mCherry signal was adjacent to the strong GFP expression rather than coincident with it (Fig. 1P,Q,R). To further verify the identity of the cells expressing the tat-6 reporters, we crossed the tat-6p::mCherry transgene into a cog-1(sy607) mutant background. cog-1 encodes a GTX/Nkx6.1 homeodomain transcription factor; in cog-1(sy607) mutant hermaphrodites, cells having the morphology of sujc cells are absent (Palmer et al. 2002). cog-1 is not expressed in sujn cells (Palmer et al. 2002). Consistent with the results with the fluorescent markers, no tat-6 reporter expression was seen in the gonad in the cog-1(sy607) mutant (Fig. 1S,T).
- Published
- 2021