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Published September 1, 2010 | Supplemental Material + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Re-programming of C. elegans male epidermal precursor fates by Wnt, Hox, and LIN-12/Notch activities

Abstract

In Caenorhabditis elegans males, different subsets of ventral epidermal precursor (Pn.p) cells adopt distinct fates in a position-specific manner: three posterior cells, P(9–11).p, comprise the hook sensillum competence group (HCG) with three potential fates (1°, 2°, or 3°), while eight anterior cells, P(1–8).p, fuse with the hyp7 epidermal syncytium. Here we show that activation of the canonical BAR-1 β-catenin pathway of Wnt signaling alters the competence of P(3–8).p and specifies ectopic HCG-like fates. This fate transformation requires the Hox gene mab-5. In addition, misexpression of mab-5 in P(1–8).p is sufficient to establish HCG competence among these cells, as well as to generate ectopic HCG fates in combination with LIN-12 or EGF signaling. While increased Wnt signaling induces predominantly 1° HCG fates, increased LIN-12 or EGF signaling in combination with MAB-5 overexpression promotes 2° HCG fates in anterior Pn.p cells, suggesting distinctive functions of Wnt, LIN-12, and EGF signaling in specification of HCG fates. Lastly, wild-type mab-5 function is necessary for normal P(9–11).p fate specification, indicating that regulation of ectopic HCG fate formation revealed in anterior Pn.p cells reflect mechanisms of pattern formation during normal hook development.

Additional Information

© 2010 Elsevier Inc. Received 12 December 2009; revised 26 April 2010; accepted 10 May 2010. Available online 15 May 2010. We thank Cynthia Kenyon for the muIs9 and muIs16 strains, John Murray and Rob Waterston for the Ex [MAB-5–GFP] strain (RW10320), Takao Inoue, Mihoko Kato, Gary Schindelman and Amir Sapir for helpful discussions and critical reading of this manuscript. We thank the Caenorhabditis Genetic Center for providing some strains used in this study. This work was supported by the HHMI, with which P.W. S. is an Investigator, and USPHS grant #1P50DK57325 to G. Germino (co-PI, P.W.S.).

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August 22, 2023
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