In metazoans, fertilization triggers the assembly of an extracellular coat that constitutes the interface between the embryo and its environment. In nematodes, this coat is the eggshell, which provides mechanical rigidity, prevents polyspermy, and is impermeable to small molecules. Using immunoelectron microscopy, we found that the Caenorhabditis elegans eggshell was composed of an outer vitelline layer, a middle chitin layer, and an inner layer containing chondroitin proteoglycans. The switch between the chitin and proteoglycan layers was achieved by internalization of chitin synthase coincident with exocytosis of proteoglycan-containing cortical granules. Inner layer assembly did not make the zygote impermeable as previously proposed. Instead, correlative light and electron microscopy demonstrated that the permeability barrier was a distinct envelope that formed in a separate step that required fatty acid synthesis, the sugar-modifying enzyme PERM-1, and the acyl chain transfer enzyme DGTR-1. These findings delineate the hierarchy of eggshell assembly and define key molecular mechanisms at each step.
In metazoans, fertilization triggers the assembly of an extracellular coat that constitutes the interface between the embryo and its environment. In nematodes, this coat is the eggshell, which provides mechanical rigidity, prevents polyspermy, and is impermeable to small molecules. Using immunoelectron microscopy, we found that the Caenorhabditis elegans eggshell was composed of an outer vitelline layer, a middle chitin layer, and an inner layer containing chondroitin proteoglycans. The switch between the chitin and proteoglycan layers was achieved by internalization of chitin synthase coincident with exocytosis of proteoglycan-containing cortical granules. Inner layer assembly did not make the zygote impermeable as previously proposed. Instead, correlative light and electron microscopy demonstrated that the permeability barrier was a distinct envelope that formed in a separate step that required fatty acid synthesis, the sugar-modifying enzyme PERM-1, and the acyl chain transfer enzyme DGTR-1. These findings delineate the hierarchy of eggshell assembly and define key molecular mechanisms at each step.
Oocytes from all animal species have a special coat of ECM that has different names
depending on the species (Foor, 1967; Wharton, 1980; Wong and Wessel, 2006): the zona pellucida in mammals, the
chorion in fish, the vitelline envelope in amphibians, mollusks, and crustaceans,
and the vitelline layer in echinoderms and nematodes. The oocyte ECM coat mediates
sperm binding and is modified after fertilization, often dramatically, to prevent
polyspermy and to generate a covering to protect the zygote. The processes that
modify the ECM coat vary between species; however, there are many common themes
(Wong and Wessel, 2006).
Postfertilization coats are assembled from material stored in the oocyte, although
supporting cells can also modify the coat from the outside. Coat assembly usually
involves exocytosis of specialized secretory vesicles that contain structural
proteins and ECM-modifying enzymes, called cortical granules. Cortical granule
exocytosis promotes separation of the vitelline layer from the embryo surface,
generating an intervening “perivitelline” space.The nematode postfertilization ECM coat is a trilaminar eggshell that has been
proposed to be comprised of an outer vitelline layer, a middle chitin layer, and an
inner lipid layer that acts as a permeability barrier that prevents the passage of
small molecules (Wharton 1980; Mansfield et al., 1992; Rappleye et al., 1999; Bembenek et al., 2007; Benenati et al.,
2009). The outer vitelline layer stains with wheat germ agglutinin (Johnston et al., 2006), suggesting that it
contains glycoproteins with N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and/or
N-acetylgalactosamine carbohydrate modifications (Natsuka et al., 2005), but no protein
components have been identified. Fertilization is thought to activate chitin
synthase (CHS-1), a multipass transmembrane protein that polymerizes cytosolic
UDP-GlcNAc into the secreted β1,4-linked GlcNAc homopolymer, chitin (Zhang et al., 2005). Chitin is thought to be
deposited under the vitelline layer immediately after fertilization (Maruyama et al., 2007), in a step that is
essential to prevent polyspermy (Johnston et al.,
2010). The next step of eggshell assembly occurs ∼15 min after
fertilization at anaphase of meiosis I, concurrent with a wave of cortical granule
exocytosis (Bembenek et al., 2007).
Exocytosed cortical granule cargo is proposed to build the inner eggshell layer and
generate the permeability barrier. Cortical granules stain with an antibody against
chondroitin (Sato et al., 2008), suggesting
that the redundant chondroitin proteoglycans (CPGs) CPG-1 and CPG-2, which are
required for eggshell impermeability, may be important cargoes (Johnston et al., 2006; Olson et al., 2006; Bembenek
et al., 2007). Fatty acid biosynthesis and modification enzymes have also
been reported to be essential for eggshell impermeability and assembly of the inner
eggshell layer (Tagawa et al., 2001; Rappleye et al., 2003; Benenati et al., 2009; Carvalho et al., 2011).Using immunoelectron microscopy, we show that the Caenorhabditis
elegans eggshell is composed of an outer vitelline layer, a middle
chitin layer, and an inner layer containing CPG-1 and CPG-2. A precise switch
between assembly of the chitin and CPG layers occurs when chitin synthase is
internalized from the cell surface concurrent with exocytosis of cortical granules
carrying CPG-1/2 at anaphase of meiosis I. Surprisingly, cortical granule exocytosis
and completion of the trilaminar shell did not confer impermeability to small
molecules as previously proposed. Correlative light and electron microscopy revealed
that the permeability barrier is a distinct envelope between the trilaminar shell
and the embryo plasma membrane that forms in a separate step. Permeability barrier
formation requires passage through anaphase of meiosis II, fatty acid biosynthesis,
the sugar-modifying enzyme PERM-1, and the acyl chain transfer enzyme DGTR-1. These
molecular requirements suggest that an ascaroside glycolipid may be an essential
constituent of the permeability barrier. These findings define the hierarchical
assembly of the nematode eggshell after fertilization, delineate the event of
permeability barrier formation, and establish the key molecular mechanisms operating
at each step.
Results
Chitin and the CPG-1/2 localize to the middle and inner layers of the
trilaminar eggshell, respectively
In electron micrographs, the C. elegans eggshell appears
trilaminar, consisting of a thin, electron-dense outer vitelline layer and
thicker middle and inner layers (Fig. 1
A; Rappleye et al., 1999).
Chitin synthesis is thought to begin immediately after fertilization to form the
middle layer. Cortical granules are exocytosed beginning ∼15 min after
fertilization (Bembenek et al., 2007).
Candidate cortical granule cargoes for incorporation into the eggshell include
the functionally redundant CPGs CPG-1 and CPG-2 (Olson et al., 2006; Bembenek et al., 2007; Sato et
al., 2008). CPG-1 and CPG-2 contain chitin-binding domains (Fig. 1 C), suggesting that they either form
a mixed matrix with chitin within one eggshell layer or are incorporated into a
separate layer adjacent to one that contains chitin. Localization of CPG-1/2 and
chitin, which had not previously been examined at the ultrastructural level, by
immunoelectron microscopy of high-pressure frozen embryos revealed that chitin
was confined almost exclusively to the middle eggshell layer (91.3%,
n = 543 gold particles and 4 embryos; Fig. 1 B). CPG-1 and CPG-2 were localized
using two antibodies: one that recognizes both proteins and one that
specifically recognizes CPG-2 (Fig. S1
A). The localization of both CPG antibodies was restricted to the
inner eggshell layer (99% for α–CPG-1/2, n
= 1,412 gold particles and 4 embryos; 96% for α–CPG-2,
n = 311 gold particles and 4 embryos; Fig. 1 C). We conclude that instead of
forming a mixed matrix, chitin is deposited in the middle layer, whereas the
CPG-1/2 proteoglycans are incorporated into the innermost layer of the
trilaminar shell.
Figure 1.
Chitin and the CPG-1/2 localize to the middle and inner layers of
the trilaminar eggshell, respectively. (middle) Transmission
electron micrographs of the eggshell in high-pressure frozen embryos.
(right) Pseudocolored micrographs illustrate the location of the outer
(black), middle, and inner eggshell layers. Beneath the inner layer is
the perivitelline space between the eggshell and embryo plasma membrane.
(A, left) A schematic is provided for orientation, with the black box
highlighting the imaged region. (B) Chitin is composed of repeating
units of β1,4-linked N-acetylglucosamine. Image
is an electron micrograph of an eggshell after immunogold labeling
(10-nm gold beads) with a chitin-binding probe. (C) CPG-1 and CPG-2 are
secreted CPGs composed of a protein core (blue) with covalently linked
chondroitin side chains (thin black lines are putative chondroitin
attachment sites based on sequence consensus; Olson et al., 2006) and chitin-binding domains.
Images are electron micrographs of eggshells after immunogold labeling
(10-nm beads) using antibodies recognizing both CPG-1 and CPG-2 (top) or
specifically CPG-2 (bottom). Bars, 100 nm.
Chitin and the CPG-1/2 localize to the middle and inner layers of
the trilaminar eggshell, respectively. (middle) Transmission
electron micrographs of the eggshell in high-pressure frozen embryos.
(right) Pseudocolored micrographs illustrate the location of the outer
(black), middle, and inner eggshell layers. Beneath the inner layer is
the perivitelline space between the eggshell and embryo plasma membrane.
(A, left) A schematic is provided for orientation, with the black box
highlighting the imaged region. (B) Chitin is composed of repeating
units of β1,4-linked N-acetylglucosamine. Image
is an electron micrograph of an eggshell after immunogold labeling
(10-nm gold beads) with a chitin-binding probe. (C) CPG-1 and CPG-2 are
secreted CPGs composed of a protein core (blue) with covalently linked
chondroitin side chains (thin black lines are putative chondroitin
attachment sites based on sequence consensus; Olson et al., 2006) and chitin-binding domains.
Images are electron micrographs of eggshells after immunogold labeling
(10-nm beads) using antibodies recognizing both CPG-1 and CPG-2 (top) or
specifically CPG-2 (bottom). Bars, 100 nm.
Chitin synthase is internalized concurrent with cortical granule exocytosis,
facilitating the deposition of chitin and CPG-1/2 in sequential layers
Cortical granules, which can be followed using the marker caveolin-1 (CAV-1;
Sato et al., 2006; Bembenek et al., 2007), stain with an
antibody to chondroitin (Sato et al.,
2008). To determine whether this is because the CPG-1/2 proteoglycans
are cortical granule cargo, we imaged transgenic strains expressing mCherry
fusions with CPG-1 or CPG-2 (Fig. 2, A and
B). Before anaphase of meiosis I, both CPG probes localized within
cytoplasmic cortical granules marked with GFP::CAV-1 (Fig. S2,
A and B). After cortical granule exocytosis at anaphase I,
mCherry::CPG-1 localized to the eggshell (Fig. 2
A). mCherry::CPG-1 fluorescence did not recover after photobleaching
(n = 10), indicating that CPG-1 is stably
incorporated into the eggshell (Fig. S2, C and E; and Video
1). In contrast to mCherry::CPG-1, the majority of mCherry::CPG-2
remained in the perivitelline space between the eggshell and embryo after its
release from cortical granules (Fig. 2
B). mCherry::CPG-2 fluorescence rapidly recovered
(t1/2 = 8 ± 1.8 s SD,
n = 10) after photobleaching, indicating that it can
freely diffuse within the perivitelline space (Fig. S2, D and F; and Video
2). Failure to preserve this freely diffusible CPG-2 likely
explains why it is not observed in fixed analysis (Figs. 1 C and S1 C). Consistent with this idea,
mCherry::CPG-2 and endogenous CPG-2 are similarly confined to the eggshell in
fixed embryos (Fig. S1 C). CPG-2 has 34 consensus sites for chondroitin
attachment compared with five for CPG-1 (Fig. 1
C; Olson et al., 2006),
suggesting that on average CPG-2 may be more glycosylated than CPG-1 and thus
more likely to remain soluble in the perivitelline space. Consistent with this
explanation, mCherry::CPG-2 localized to the eggshell, rather than the
perivitelline space, in embryos depleted of SQV-5, the enzyme responsible for
elongating chondroitin chains (Fig. 2 B).
This analysis identifies the cortical granule components CPG-1 and CPG-2 as the
first described components of the inner eggshell layer, which we will
subsequently refer to as the CPG layer, and suggests that CPG-2 localizes to
both the CPG layer and to the perivitelline space.
Figure 2.
Chitin synthase is internalized concurrent with cortical granule
exocytosis, facilitating the deposition of chitin and CPG-1/2 in
sequential layers. (A) Confocal images of a two-cell stage
embryo expressing a GFP-labeled plasma membrane probe (left) and
mCherry::CPG-1 (middle). (B) Confocal images of two-cell stage control
(top) and sqv-5(RNAi) (bottom) embryos expressing a
GFP-labeled plasma membrane probe (left) and mCherry::CPG-2 (middle).
(C) Time-lapse confocal images of a one-cell stage embryo expressing
GFP::CHS-1 (left) and mCherry::CPG-2 (middle). Times are minutes and
seconds after anaphase I. Embryo anterior is on the left. (D) Higher
magnification view of the anterior of embryo in C. (E) Confocal images
of two control (left) and two cpg-1/2(RNAi) (right)
embryos expressing GFP::CHS-1. Times are minutes and seconds past
anaphase I, when CHS-1 normally starts to internalize from the plasma
membrane into subcortical puncta. Boxed regions are magnified below.
Schematics highlight GFP::CHS-1 localization. By 2 min after anaphase I,
the majority of GFP::CHS-1 in control embryos has been internalized into
puncta (red spheres). In cpg-1/2(RNAi) embryos at a
later time point, ∼4 min after anaphase I, some GFP::CHS-1 have
internalized into puncta, but some also remain associated with the
plasma membrane (red line). Bars, 10 µm. n
= number of imaged embryos.
Chitin synthase is internalized concurrent with cortical granule
exocytosis, facilitating the deposition of chitin and CPG-1/2 in
sequential layers. (A) Confocal images of a two-cell stage
embryo expressing a GFP-labeled plasma membrane probe (left) and
mCherry::CPG-1 (middle). (B) Confocal images of two-cell stage control
(top) and sqv-5(RNAi) (bottom) embryos expressing a
GFP-labeled plasma membrane probe (left) and mCherry::CPG-2 (middle).
(C) Time-lapse confocal images of a one-cell stage embryo expressing
GFP::CHS-1 (left) and mCherry::CPG-2 (middle). Times are minutes and
seconds after anaphase I. Embryo anterior is on the left. (D) Higher
magnification view of the anterior of embryo in C. (E) Confocal images
of two control (left) and two cpg-1/2(RNAi) (right)
embryos expressing GFP::CHS-1. Times are minutes and seconds past
anaphase I, when CHS-1 normally starts to internalize from the plasma
membrane into subcortical puncta. Boxed regions are magnified below.
Schematics highlight GFP::CHS-1 localization. By 2 min after anaphase I,
the majority of GFP::CHS-1 in control embryos has been internalized into
puncta (red spheres). In cpg-1/2(RNAi) embryos at a
later time point, ∼4 min after anaphase I, some GFP::CHS-1 have
internalized into puncta, but some also remain associated with the
plasma membrane (red line). Bars, 10 µm. n
= number of imaged embryos.To understand how chitin and CPG-1/2 are restricted to the middle and inner
layers, respectively, we imaged embryos coexpressing mCherry::CPG-2 and a GFP
fusion with the chitin synthaseCHS-1 (Maruyama et al., 2007), a multipass transmembrane protein that
secretes chitin into the extracellular space. Release of mCherry::CPG-2 at
anaphase of meiosis I (Fig. 2, C and D;
and Video
3) was temporally coupled to the previously described
internalization of GFP::CHS-1 (Maruyama et
al., 2007; Stitzel et al.,
2007). CPG-1/2 depletion delayed GFP::CHS-1 internalization (Fig. 2 E) and led to formation of a chitin
layer that is ∼1.6-fold thicker than controls (Fig. 3 C). We conclude that temporal coupling of chitin
synthase internalization to cortical granule release may contribute to
establishing the sharp boundary between the middle chitin and inner CPG eggshell
layers.
Figure 3.
Formation of the inner CPG layer requires prior deposition of the
chitin layer. (A, top) Immunofluorescence images of embryos
stained with a chitin-binding probe (white) and for DNA. (bottom)
Confocal images of embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-1. (B) Confocal
images of cpg-1/2(RNAi) (top; n
= 23) and chs-1(RNAi) (bottom;
n = 26) embryos expressing a GFP-labeled
plasma membrane probe and mCherry::histone H2B. Locations where the
plasma membrane is able to separate from the eggshell (scallops; yellow
arrows), a failed attempt at cytokinesis (white arrow) and a point where
the eggshell lost integrity (rupture; white arrowheads) are marked.
Times are minutes and seconds after the first frame. (C) Transmission
electron micrographs of high-pressure frozen embryos. (right)
Pseudocolored micrographs illustrate the location of the vitelline,
chitin, and CPG layers. The mitotic control image is reproduced from
Fig. 1 A for comparison.
Bars: (A and B) 10 µm; (C) 200 nm. n =
number of imaged embryos.
Formation of the inner CPG layer requires prior deposition of the
chitin layer. (A, top) Immunofluorescence images of embryos
stained with a chitin-binding probe (white) and for DNA. (bottom)
Confocal images of embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-1. (B) Confocal
images of cpg-1/2(RNAi) (top; n
= 23) and chs-1(RNAi) (bottom;
n = 26) embryos expressing a GFP-labeled
plasma membrane probe and mCherry::histone H2B. Locations where the
plasma membrane is able to separate from the eggshell (scallops; yellow
arrows), a failed attempt at cytokinesis (white arrow) and a point where
the eggshell lost integrity (rupture; white arrowheads) are marked.
Times are minutes and seconds after the first frame. (C) Transmission
electron micrographs of high-pressure frozen embryos. (right)
Pseudocolored micrographs illustrate the location of the vitelline,
chitin, and CPG layers. The mitotic control image is reproduced from
Fig. 1 A for comparison.
Bars: (A and B) 10 µm; (C) 200 nm. n =
number of imaged embryos.
Formation of the inner CPG layer requires prior deposition of the chitin
layer
As anticipated based on their sequential deposition, chitin deposition did not
require CPG-1/2 (Fig. 3 A). In the
converse experiment, mCherry::CPG-1 was not deposited in the eggshell when
chitin synthesis was inhibited (Fig. 3
A). This result suggests that the chitin layer scaffolds assembly of the
CPG layer, potentially through interactions between chitin and the
chitin-binding domains of CPG-1/2. Consistent with chitin layer assembly being
upstream of CPG-1/2 deposition, inhibition of CPG-1/2 resulted in a less severe
phenotype than inhibition of chitin synthase. Even when dissected into osmotic
support medium, cpg-1/2(RNAi) embryos were swollen within the
eggshell, with their plasma membranes adhered to the inside of the shell (Fig. 3 B). cpg-1/2(RNAi)
embryos had a scalloped appearance because the plasma membrane detached from the
shell in small regions to generate pockets of perivitelline space (Video
4). When chitin synthesis was inhibited through CHS-1 depletion,
scallops were also observed. In addition, the eggshells frequently ruptured,
causing the embryo to extrude out of the shell (Fig. 3 B and see Fig. 6 C and
Video
5). We conclude that the chitin and CPG layers assemble in a
hierarchical fashion. Chitin layer deposition is required for the subsequent
assembly of the CPG layer and for the mechanical integrity of the eggshell.
Figure 6.
Genes involved in fatty acid synthesis are required to form the
permeability barrier. (A) Schematic outline of some of the
genes in the fatty acid biosynthetic and modification pathway. CYP,
Cytochrome P450. (B) Confocal images of control embryos and embryos in
which the indicated proteins were inhibited by RNAi. (first column) The
middle chitin layer was visualized in fixed embryos by staining for
chitin and DNA. White asterisks mark extruded polar bodies. (second
column) The inner CPG layer was visualized in embryos expressing
mCherry::CPG-1. (third column) The presence of the permeability barrier
was assessed in embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-2 and a GFP-tagged
plasma membrane marker. In control embryos, the permeability barrier
prevents diffusion of mCherry::CPG-2 to the embryo surface (open
arrowhead). When fatty acid synthesis is inhibited, the permeability
barrier is disrupted, and mCherry::CPG-2 fills the entire space between
the eggshell and embryo surface (closed arrowheads). (last column)
Embryos expressing a GFP-tagged plasma membrane probe were placed in
FM4-64 dye to test their permeability. (C) The phenotypic consequences
of disrupting the eggshell permeability barrier
(cyp-31A2/3(RNAi)), the inner CPG layer
(cpg-1/2(RNAi)), and the middle chitin layer
(chs-1(RNAi)) were compared by analyzing the
percentage of embryos exhibiting each of the indicated phenotypes. Data
were pooled from >10 independent imaging sessions for each
condition. Plasma membrane adhesion (yellow arrows) was also usually
accompanied by cytokinesis failure (59% of
cpg-1/2(RNAi) embryos failed cytokinesis). In
addition to the quantified phenotypes, chitin layer disruption also led
to polyspermy (24% of chs-1(RNAi) embryos were
polyspermic). The images of embryos illustrating membrane adhesion and
eggshell rupture (white arrowhead) are reproduced from Fig. 3 B. The left image is of an
embryo expressing a GFP-tagged plasma membrane marker and
mCherry::histone H2B (red) that was placed in FM4-64 dye. Bars, 10
µm. n = number of imaged embryos.
CPG-1/2 are required for the formation of the inner CPG layer
In electron micrographs of early embryos, fixed by high-pressure freezing at time
points between fertilization and anaphase of meiosis I, a chitin layer was
present between the vitelline layer and the embryo plasma membrane, but there
was no CPG layer or perivitelline space. In later mitotically dividing embryos,
the trilaminar eggshell was complete, and the perivitelline space was present
(Fig. 3 C). In mitotic
cpg-1/2(RNAi) embryos, the majority (∼80%) of the
embryo plasma membrane was immediately juxtaposed to the chitin layer as in
control embryos fixed before anaphase I. The chitin layer was thicker than in
controls (131 ± 25 nm SD in cpg-1/2(RNAi),
n = 56 fields, and n = 8
embryos; vs. 80 ± 16 nm in wild type, n = 30
fields, and n = 6 embryos), and there was no intervening
inner layer or perivitelline space. However, within the scallops, which covered
∼20% (20.5 ± 13% SD, n = 6 embryos) of the
embryo surface, an inner layer was present (Fig.
3 C). We suspect that this partial inner layer is caused by residual
CPG-1/2. We conclude that CPG-1/2 are required for formation of the CPG layer
and that the CPG layer is in turn required to detach the plasma membrane from
the chitin layer and open up the perivitelline space.
Formation of a permeability barrier requires passage through anaphase of
meiosis II
Nematode eggshells contain a permeability barrier virtually unrivaled in the
animal kingdom that limits the diffusion of water and small molecular weight
solutes, while still allowing for gas exchange (Christenson, 1950; Fairbairn, 1957; Anya,
1976). The inner layer of the trilaminar shell has been proposed to be
the permeability barrier. Consistent with this idea, inhibition of chitin
synthase or CPG-1/2 results in permeable embryos that take up FM4-64 dye (Johnston et al., 2006). FM4-64 is
excluded by intact eggshells but passes through permeable eggshells and
fluoresces upon binding to the plasma membrane (Fig. 4 A). To determine when the permeability barrier forms, we
monitored the ability of embryos at different developmental stages to take up
FM4-64 dye. Because the inner CPG layer is deposited during anaphase of meiosis
I, we anticipated that the permeability barrier would be formed at this time.
Contrary to this expectation, embryos remained permeable for ∼14 min past
anaphase of meiosis I and only became impermeable at anaphase of meiosis II
(Fig. 4 B). These data suggested two
possibilities: (1) cortical granule cargoes form the permeability barrier, but
the barrier takes ∼14 min to mature after exocytosis, or (2) formation of
the permeability barrier is a distinct event that requires passage through
anaphase of meiosis II. To distinguish between these possibilities, we
artificially extended the time interval between anaphase of meiosis I and II.
Embryos depleted of the CUL-2 E3 ubiquitin ligase progress normally through
anaphase of meiosis I and release cortical granule cargo (Fig. 4 C) but then enter a prolonged metaphase II, which
extends the time interval between anaphase of meiosis I and II from 14 min to
∼50 min (Liu et al., 2004; Sonneville and Gönczy, 2004).
CUL-2 depletion led to a delay in permeability barrier formation comparable with
the delay induced in onset of anaphase of meiosis II (Fig. 4 D). We conclude that permeability barrier formation
represents a previously unappreciated distinct step that requires passage
through anaphase of meiosis II.
Figure 4.
Formation of a functional permeability barrier requires passage
through anaphase of meiosis II. (A) Confocal images of
control (n = 12), chs-1(RNAi)
(n = 18), and cpg-1/2(RNAi)
(n = 18) embryos expressing a GFP-labeled
plasma membrane probe and mCherry::histone H2B (red) that were dissected
into FM4-64 dye (illustrated in schematics). (B) Embryos expressing
GFP::histone H2B (green) were dissected in FM4-64 dye at different
stages between anaphase of meiosis I and anaphase of the first mitotic
division. Arrow positions indicate the times when that embryo was
exposed to dye, and the color indicates whether it was permeable. White
arrows highlight weak FM4-64 staining of the plasma membrane in a
partially permeable embryo. (C) Time-lapse confocal images of a
cul-2(RNAi) embryo expressing mCherry::CPG-2 and
GFP::histone H2B (n = 19). Times are minutes and
seconds past anaphase I. (D) Control (top; n =
8) and cul-2(RNAi) (bottom; n =
44) embryos expressing GFP::histone H2B and GFP::γ-tubulin were
exposed to FM4-64 dye at different stages to assess eggshell
permeability. Arrow positions indicate the time when that embryo was
exposed to dye, and the color indicates permeability status. Embryos
observed during this experiment whose temporal staging was imprecise are
represented by the green and red striped region of the timeline rather
than arrows (21 permeable, 2 partially permeable, and 11 impermeable
embryos). Bars, 10 µm.
Formation of a functional permeability barrier requires passage
through anaphase of meiosis II. (A) Confocal images of
control (n = 12), chs-1(RNAi)
(n = 18), and cpg-1/2(RNAi)
(n = 18) embryos expressing a GFP-labeled
plasma membrane probe and mCherry::histone H2B (red) that were dissected
into FM4-64 dye (illustrated in schematics). (B) Embryos expressing
GFP::histone H2B (green) were dissected in FM4-64 dye at different
stages between anaphase of meiosis I and anaphase of the first mitotic
division. Arrow positions indicate the times when that embryo was
exposed to dye, and the color indicates whether it was permeable. White
arrows highlight weak FM4-64 staining of the plasma membrane in a
partially permeable embryo. (C) Time-lapse confocal images of a
cul-2(RNAi) embryo expressing mCherry::CPG-2 and
GFP::histone H2B (n = 19). Times are minutes and
seconds past anaphase I. (D) Control (top; n =
8) and cul-2(RNAi) (bottom; n =
44) embryos expressing GFP::histone H2B and GFP::γ-tubulin were
exposed to FM4-64 dye at different stages to assess eggshell
permeability. Arrow positions indicate the time when that embryo was
exposed to dye, and the color indicates permeability status. Embryos
observed during this experiment whose temporal staging was imprecise are
represented by the green and red striped region of the timeline rather
than arrows (21 permeable, 2 partially permeable, and 11 impermeable
embryos). Bars, 10 µm.
The permeability barrier is a distinct envelope that assembles between the
embryo plasma membrane and trilaminar eggshell
The fact that the permeability layer forms during anaphase II, whereas cortical
granule exocytosis occurs at anaphase I, raised the possibility that the
permeability barrier and the cortical granule-derived inner eggshell layer are
not the same structure. To visualize the location of the permeability barrier,
we incubated embryos in solutions containing two different fluorescent small
molecules, Oregon greenphalloidin (molecular mass = 1,300 D) or
fluorescein (molecular mass = 389 D). In both cases, the dye penetrated
into the perivitelline space but, in many regions, was observed to stop short of
the embryo surface (Fig. 5 A, yellow
arrows). This analysis suggested that the permeability barrier is a separate
structure that lies between the inner layer of the eggshell and the embryo
plasma membrane. mCherry::CPG-2, which is extruded into the perivitelline space
at anaphase of meiosis I, was confined to the portion of the perivitelline space
outside the permeability barrier, making it an excellent marker for barrier
location (Fig. 5 B). The permeability
barrier could also be visualized in high contrast differential interference
contrast (DIC) images (Fig. 5 B).
Figure 5.
The permeability barrier is a distinct envelope that forms between
the embryo surface and trilaminar eggshell. (A) Embryos
placed in Oregon green (OG) phalloidin (left; n
= 14), fluorescein (middle; n = 7), or
3,000-D fluorescein dextran (right; n = 10) were
imaged by differential interference contrast (DIC; top row) and
fluorescence (middle row; green in merge) microscopy. Magnified views of
the embryo anterior are shown on the right (yellow dashed lines mark the
embryo plasma membrane; yellow arrows point to the edge of the
permeability barrier). (B) DIC (top) and fluorescence (middle; red in
merge) images of a one cell–stage mitotic embryo expressing
mCherry::CPG-2 (n = 9). The embryo anterior is
magnified on the right. The contrast of the top DIC image has been
adjusted to visualize the edge of the permeability barrier (indicated by
the black arrows in the merge). (C, left) A fluorescence image of CPG-2
was acquired immediately before cryoimmobilization and processing for
transmission electron microscopy (n = 3).
(middle) Alignment of the resulting correlative transmission electron
micrograph (TEM) image allows visualization of the edge of the
permeability barrier (red arrowheads). (right) A pseudocolored
micrograph illustrates the location of the chitin and CPG eggshell
layers along with the edge of the permeability barrier. The
periembryonic and perivitelline spaces and the first polar body are also
labeled. (D) Transmission electron micrographs of a control embryo
showing the location of the polar bodies extruded during anaphase of
meiosis I (embedded in the CPG layer; see also C) and during anaphase of
meiosis II (in the periembryonic space). (E) Merged DIC and fluorescence
images of the anterior of an embryo at the two-cell stage expressing
mCherry::CPG-2. Green lines mark the location of the permeability
barrier. Time indicates minutes and seconds past the first frame. (F)
DIC and confocal fluorescence images of control (n
= 12) and partial kca-1(RNAi)
(n = 12) embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-2.
(middle row) Embryos were also exposed to FITC dye to monitor the
integrity of the permeability barrier (green lines). The embryo surface
is also marked (dashed yellow lines). (G) Confocal fluorescence images
of control (left) and partial kca-1(RNAi) (right)
embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-2. The mCherry::CPG-2 in the
perivitelline (left) or periembryonic (right) spaces was photobleached
(red circle inside dashed white box, magnified on the left) at 0 s, and
the embryo was continuously imaged every 1 or 2 s (left and right,
respectively) to monitor recovery (quantified in graphs below). Bars:
(A–C [left], E, and G) 10 µm; (C [middle and right], D,
and F) 1 µm.
The permeability barrier is a distinct envelope that forms between
the embryo surface and trilaminar eggshell. (A) Embryos
placed in Oregon green (OG) phalloidin (left; n
= 14), fluorescein (middle; n = 7), or
3,000-Dfluorescein dextran (right; n = 10) were
imaged by differential interference contrast (DIC; top row) and
fluorescence (middle row; green in merge) microscopy. Magnified views of
the embryo anterior are shown on the right (yellow dashed lines mark the
embryo plasma membrane; yellow arrows point to the edge of the
permeability barrier). (B) DIC (top) and fluorescence (middle; red in
merge) images of a one cell–stage mitotic embryo expressing
mCherry::CPG-2 (n = 9). The embryo anterior is
magnified on the right. The contrast of the top DIC image has been
adjusted to visualize the edge of the permeability barrier (indicated by
the black arrows in the merge). (C, left) A fluorescence image of CPG-2
was acquired immediately before cryoimmobilization and processing for
transmission electron microscopy (n = 3).
(middle) Alignment of the resulting correlative transmission electron
micrograph (TEM) image allows visualization of the edge of the
permeability barrier (red arrowheads). (right) A pseudocolored
micrograph illustrates the location of the chitin and CPG eggshell
layers along with the edge of the permeability barrier. The
periembryonic and perivitelline spaces and the first polar body are also
labeled. (D) Transmission electron micrographs of a control embryo
showing the location of the polar bodies extruded during anaphase of
meiosis I (embedded in the CPG layer; see also C) and during anaphase of
meiosis II (in the periembryonic space). (E) Merged DIC and fluorescence
images of the anterior of an embryo at the two-cell stage expressing
mCherry::CPG-2. Green lines mark the location of the permeability
barrier. Time indicates minutes and seconds past the first frame. (F)
DIC and confocal fluorescence images of control (n
= 12) and partial kca-1(RNAi)
(n = 12) embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-2.
(middle row) Embryos were also exposed to FITC dye to monitor the
integrity of the permeability barrier (green lines). The embryo surface
is also marked (dashed yellow lines). (G) Confocal fluorescence images
of control (left) and partial kca-1(RNAi) (right)
embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-2. The mCherry::CPG-2 in the
perivitelline (left) or periembryonic (right) spaces was photobleached
(red circle inside dashed white box, magnified on the left) at 0 s, and
the embryo was continuously imaged every 1 or 2 s (left and right,
respectively) to monitor recovery (quantified in graphs below). Bars:
(A–C [left], E, and G) 10 µm; (C [middle and right], D,
and F) 1 µm.To identify a structure corresponding to the permeability barrier at the
ultrastructural level, we performed correlative light and electron microscopy on
embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-2. Fluorescence images of mCherry::CPG-2 were
collected, and the embryo was immediately high-pressure frozen and processed for
electron microscopy (Pelletier et al.,
2006). Comparison of the fluorescence and electron microscopy images
revealed that the boundary of mCherry::CPG-2 diffusion correlated with a
structural boundary that partitioned space between the embryo surface and
eggshell into two regions (Fig. 5 C). We
propose naming the region between the embryo plasma membrane and the
permeability barrier the “periembryonic space” to distinguish it
from the perivitelline space between the permeability barrier and eggshell
(Fig. 5 C). Consistent with its
formation at anaphase of meiosis II, the permeability barrier encased the second
polar body but not the first (Fig. 5 D).
Live imaging of embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-2 revealed that the permeability
barrier is more malleable than the eggshell. However, the permeability barrier
does not always conform to the surface of the embryo. For example, when the
embryo changes shape during cytokinesis, the furrow pulls away from the
permeability barrier, which behaves like a tightly drawn blanket encasing the
embryo (Fig. 5 E and Video
6).To compare the properties of the periembryonic and perivitelline spaces, we
analyzed the diffusion of mCherry::CPG-2. To deliver mCherry::CPG-2 to the
periembryonic space where it is normally not present, we depleted KCA-1, a
kinesin cargo adaptor, whose depletion leads to a partially penetrant permeable
eggshell phenotype (Carvalho et al.,
2011). In kca-1(RNAi) embryos, targeting of cortical
granules to the cell surface is impaired (Video
7), causing some granules to be exocytosed at anaphase of meiosis
I but a small fraction to be exocytosed after formation of the permeability
barrier at anaphase II. We used partial kca-1(RNAi) to deliver
some mCherry::CPG-2 to the periembryonic space while retaining the integrity of
the permeability barrier (Fig. 5 F, area
between green and yellow lines). FRAP analysis revealed that mCherry::CPG-2 in
the periembryonic space recovered with similar kinetics to mCherry::CPG-2 in the
perivitelline space (t1/2 = 8 ± 2.6 s
SD, n = 7; vs. t1/2 =
8 ± 1.8 s, n = 10; Figs. 5 G and S2), suggesting that both are fluid-filled
spaces with similar properties. These results show that although mCherry::CPG-2
cannot diffuse past the permeability barrier from the perivitelline space, it
can diffuse freely inside the periembryonic space if delivered from the inside
of the embryo. We conclude that the permeability barrier is a thin impenetrable
envelope that partitions the space between the eggshell and the plasma membrane
when it forms at anaphase of meiosis II.
Genes involved in fatty acid synthesis are required to form the permeability
barrier
Depletion of enzymes required for fatty acid biosynthesis and modification,
including POD-2 (acetyl-CoA carboxylase), FASN-1 (fatty acid synthase), EMB-8
(NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase), and CYP-31A2/CYP-31A3 (cytochrome P450s;
Fig. 6 A) have been shown to result
in the Pod (polarity and osmotic defective) phenotype and have been proposed to
be required for assembly of the inner eggshell layer (Tagawa et al., 2001; Rappleye et al., 2003; Benenati et
al., 2009). Given our finding that the inner eggshell layer is not
the permeability barrier, we hypothesized that depletion of these genes affects
formation of the permeability barrier rather than of the inner eggshell layer.
Consistent with this idea, depletion of fatty acid biosynthetic/modification
enzymes did not affect chitin or mCherry::CPG-1 localization (Fig. 6 B), and no membrane scalloping or
eggshell rupture phenotypes associated with defects in the chitin and inner
eggshell layers were observed (Fig. 6 C).
In contrast, when fatty acid enzymes were inhibited, the permeability barrier
was compromised—FM4-64 dye bound the plasma membrane and mCherry::CPG-2
freely diffused within the entire space between the eggshell and the plasma
membrane (Fig. 6 B). Thus, the fatty acid
biosynthetic pathway is required for formation of the permeability barrier in a
step that occurs after the assembly of the trilaminar eggshell.Genes involved in fatty acid synthesis are required to form the
permeability barrier. (A) Schematic outline of some of the
genes in the fatty acid biosynthetic and modification pathway. CYP,
Cytochrome P450. (B) Confocal images of control embryos and embryos in
which the indicated proteins were inhibited by RNAi. (first column) The
middle chitin layer was visualized in fixed embryos by staining for
chitin and DNA. White asterisks mark extruded polar bodies. (second
column) The inner CPG layer was visualized in embryos expressing
mCherry::CPG-1. (third column) The presence of the permeability barrier
was assessed in embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-2 and a GFP-tagged
plasma membrane marker. In control embryos, the permeability barrier
prevents diffusion of mCherry::CPG-2 to the embryo surface (open
arrowhead). When fatty acid synthesis is inhibited, the permeability
barrier is disrupted, and mCherry::CPG-2 fills the entire space between
the eggshell and embryo surface (closed arrowheads). (last column)
Embryos expressing a GFP-tagged plasma membrane probe were placed in
FM4-64 dye to test their permeability. (C) The phenotypic consequences
of disrupting the eggshell permeability barrier
(cyp-31A2/3(RNAi)), the inner CPG layer
(cpg-1/2(RNAi)), and the middle chitin layer
(chs-1(RNAi)) were compared by analyzing the
percentage of embryos exhibiting each of the indicated phenotypes. Data
were pooled from >10 independent imaging sessions for each
condition. Plasma membrane adhesion (yellow arrows) was also usually
accompanied by cytokinesis failure (59% of
cpg-1/2(RNAi) embryos failed cytokinesis). In
addition to the quantified phenotypes, chitin layer disruption also led
to polyspermy (24% of chs-1(RNAi) embryos were
polyspermic). The images of embryos illustrating membrane adhesion and
eggshell rupture (white arrowhead) are reproduced from Fig. 3 B. The left image is of an
embryo expressing a GFP-tagged plasma membrane marker and
mCherry::histone H2B (red) that was placed in FM4-64 dye. Bars, 10
µm. n = number of imaged embryos.To determine whether the fatty acids used in eggshell formation are synthesized
in the germline or whether the germline imports fatty acids synthesized in
another tissue, such as the intestine, we performed RNAi in
rrf-1(pk1417) mutant worms in which germline RNAi is
intact, but somatic RNAi is defective. For all genes tested, embryos failed to
form a permeability barrier when RNAi was only effective in the germline (Fig. 7), indicating that the fatty acid
derivatives comprising the permeability barrier are synthesized by
germline-expressed enzymes.
Figure 7.
Permeability barrier formation requires germline expression of
fatty acid synthesis genes. Confocal images of control
embryos and embryos in which the indicated components of the fatty acid
biosynthesis pathway were inhibited by RNAi in either an
rrf-1(+) (left) or
rrf-1(pk1417) mutant background (right). Embryos
expressing a GFP-tagged plasma membrane probe and mCherry::histone H2B
(red) were placed in FM4-64 dye. All RNAi-treated embryos were permeable
in the rrf-1(pk1417) background, indicating that
germline expression of these genes is required. n
= number of imaged embryos. Bars, 10 µm.
Permeability barrier formation requires germline expression of
fatty acid synthesis genes. Confocal images of control
embryos and embryos in which the indicated components of the fatty acid
biosynthesis pathway were inhibited by RNAi in either an
rrf-1(+) (left) or
rrf-1(pk1417) mutant background (right). Embryos
expressing a GFP-tagged plasma membrane probe and mCherry::histone H2B
(red) were placed in FM4-64 dye. All RNAi-treated embryos were permeable
in the rrf-1(pk1417) background, indicating that
germline expression of these genes is required. n
= number of imaged embryos. Bars, 10 µm.
A requirement for PERM-1 and DGTR-1 suggests that the fatty acid required for
permeability barrier formation is an ascaroside
We recently performed an RNAi screen for genes involved in C.
elegans eggshell assembly (Carvalho et al., 2011) that implicated two previously
uncharacterized genes, perm-1 (permeable eggshell) and
dgtr-1 (DGAT related), as
important for assembly of an impermeable eggshell. Using the aforementioned
assays, we determined which step of eggshell assembly is affected by inhibition
of PERM-1 or DGTR-1. This analysis revealed that depletion of PERM-1 or DGTR-1
phenocopies inhibition of the fatty acid synthesis genes. Depleted embryos
showed normal localization of the chitin probe and mCherry::CPG-1, but the
permeability barrier was compromised (Fig. 8
A). PERM-1 and DGTR-1 are required in the germline, similar to the
fatty acid genes (Fig. 8 B). Primary
sequence analysis of PERM-1 revealed homology to dehydratase, NAD binding,
nucleotide sugar epimerase, and dehydrorhamnose reductase protein domains (Fig. 8 C), all of which would be required
to generate the nucleotide sugar cytidine diphosphate (CDP)-ascarylose from a
CDP-glucose precursor (Thibodeaux et al.,
2007). Ascarylose is a rare dideoxy sugar found in ascaroside
glycolipids, which are comprised of one or two ascarylose sugars covalently
attached to a long-chain fatty acid–like molecule (Fig. 8 D). Ascarosides were previously purified from the
eggshells of parasitic nematode species (Timm,
1950; Fouquey et al., 1957;
Jezyk and Fairbairn, 1967; Tarr and Fairbairn, 1973; Bartley et al., 1996), and C.
elegans is known to make short chain ascarosides, such as dauer
pheromone, that perform signaling functions (Butcher et al., 2009; Edison,
2009). DGTR-1 shows homology to the DGAT2 family of
acyl-CoA:diacylglycerol acyltransferase enzymes, which catalyzes the addition of
fatty acyl-CoA to diacylglycerol to form triacylglycerol. The chemical reaction
catalyzed by DGAT2 is similar to that expected to covalently link ascarylose to
long-chain fatty acids, suggesting that DGTR-1 may also be implicated in
ascaroside biosynthesis (Fig. 8 D). The
identification of the sugar-modifying enzyme PERM-1 and the acyl chain transfer
enzyme DGTR-1 as important for permeability barrier formation suggests that a
glycolipid, perhaps an ascaroside, is an essential component of the permeability
barrier.
Figure 8.
A requirement for PERM-1 and DGTR-1 suggests that an ascaroside may
be important for permeability barrier formation. (A) Confocal
images of control embryos and embryos in which PERM-1 and DGTR-1 were
depleted by RNAi. (first column) The middle chitin layer was visualized
in fixed embryos by staining for chitin and DNA. White asterisks mark
extruded polar bodies. (second column) The inner CPG layer was
visualized in embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-1. (third column) The
presence of the permeability barrier was assessed in embryos expressing
mCherry::CPG-2 and a GFP-tagged plasma membrane marker. In control
embryos, the permeability barrier prevents diffusion of mCherry::CPG-2
to the embryo surface (open arrowhead). When PERM-1 and DGTR-1 are
inhibited, mCherry::CPG-2 fills the entire space between the eggshell
and embryo surface (closed arrowheads). (last column) Embryos expressing
a GFP-tagged plasma membrane probe were placed in FM4-64 dye to test
their permeability. (B) Confocal images of embryos in which PERM-1 and
DGTR-1 were inhibited by RNAi in either an
rrf-1(+) (left column) or
rrf-1(pk1417) mutant background (right column).
Embryos expressing a GFP-tagged plasma membrane probe and
mCherry::histone H2B (red) were placed in FM4-64 dye to test their
permeability. For A and B, n = number of imaged
embryos. Bars, 10 µm. (C) Schematics of PERM-1 and DGTR-1 showing
the location of domains predicted by BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search
Tool). The TOPCONS program (Stockholm Bioinformatics Center) predicted
both proteins to contain two transmembrane domains (2×TM). dTDP,
deoxythymidine diphosphate. (D) A putative pathway for ascaroside
synthesis in which activated CDP-ascarylose (left side) combines with a
long-chain fatty acid–like molecule (right side) to generate
ascaroside glycolipid. The reactions proposed to convert CDP-glucose
into CDP-ascarylose are based on chemical reactions identified in
prokaryotes (Thibodeaux et al.,
2007). Points where PERM-1 and DGTR-1 might function in this
pathway are indicated.
A requirement for PERM-1 and DGTR-1 suggests that an ascaroside may
be important for permeability barrier formation. (A) Confocal
images of control embryos and embryos in which PERM-1 and DGTR-1 were
depleted by RNAi. (first column) The middle chitin layer was visualized
in fixed embryos by staining for chitin and DNA. White asterisks mark
extruded polar bodies. (second column) The inner CPG layer was
visualized in embryos expressing mCherry::CPG-1. (third column) The
presence of the permeability barrier was assessed in embryos expressing
mCherry::CPG-2 and a GFP-tagged plasma membrane marker. In control
embryos, the permeability barrier prevents diffusion of mCherry::CPG-2
to the embryo surface (open arrowhead). When PERM-1 and DGTR-1 are
inhibited, mCherry::CPG-2 fills the entire space between the eggshell
and embryo surface (closed arrowheads). (last column) Embryos expressing
a GFP-tagged plasma membrane probe were placed in FM4-64 dye to test
their permeability. (B) Confocal images of embryos in which PERM-1 and
DGTR-1 were inhibited by RNAi in either an
rrf-1(+) (left column) or
rrf-1(pk1417) mutant background (right column).
Embryos expressing a GFP-tagged plasma membrane probe and
mCherry::histone H2B (red) were placed in FM4-64 dye to test their
permeability. For A and B, n = number of imaged
embryos. Bars, 10 µm. (C) Schematics of PERM-1 and DGTR-1 showing
the location of domains predicted by BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search
Tool). The TOPCONS program (Stockholm Bioinformatics Center) predicted
both proteins to contain two transmembrane domains (2×TM). dTDP,
deoxythymidine diphosphate. (D) A putative pathway for ascaroside
synthesis in which activated CDP-ascarylose (left side) combines with a
long-chain fatty acid–like molecule (right side) to generate
ascaroside glycolipid. The reactions proposed to convert CDP-glucose
into CDP-ascarylose are based on chemical reactions identified in
prokaryotes (Thibodeaux et al.,
2007). Points where PERM-1 and DGTR-1 might function in this
pathway are indicated.
Discussion
The work described here shows that the C. elegans zygote builds a
trilaminar eggshell consisting of an outer vitelline layer that is present on the
oocyte surface before fertilization, a middle chitin-containing layer that is
assembled immediately after fertilization, and an inner layer containing the CPG-1/2
proteoglycans that forms concurrent with cortical granule exocytosis at anaphase of
meiosis I. Assembly of the trilaminar shell is followed by a distinct step during
anaphase of meiosis II that builds a malleable envelope that functions as a
permeability barrier; this step requires fatty acid and carbohydrate
synthesis/modification enzymes, suggesting that this internal envelope contains
glycolipids. The chitin layer provides mechanical rigidity and serves as a block to
polyspermy; the inner CPG layer prevents plasma membrane adhesion to the chitin
layer and expands the fluid-filled perivitelline space, and the permeability barrier
isolates the embryo from the environment. Collectively, the trilaminar shell and
permeability barrier provide a protective environment for embryo development.We propose the nomenclature in Fig. 9 for the
eggshell layers, permeability barrier, and intervening spaces. The outer vitelline
layer, which covers the oocyte surface before fertilization, was originally named by
Foor (1967), and we favor retaining
this term as it corresponds to the names for the analogous initial ECM layer in
other species (vitelline layer in echinoderms, vitelline envelope in amphibians,
mollusks, and crustaceans, and vitelline membrane in dipterans; Wong and Wessel, 2006). We propose the term
chitin layer to describe the middle layer of the trilaminar shell because
immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated that chitin is present in and limited to this
middle layer. The innermost layer of the eggshell was previously termed the
lipid-rich layer, but our data suggest that this layer is instead comprised of
cortical granule cargo. We propose naming this layer the CPG layer after its
essential structural components, CPG-1/2. We propose naming the impermeable barrier
between the eggshell and embryo surface the permeability barrier. The space between
the embryo plasma membrane and the eggshell has been previously termed the
perivitelline space. As the permeability barrier partitions this space into two
distinct compartments, we propose using the term perivitelline space for the region
between the eggshell and the permeability barrier and the term periembryonic space
for the region between the permeability barrier and embryo plasma membrane. The
slightly more electron-dense region around the embryo was observed in a previous
study and termed the embryonic layer (Benenati et
al., 2009), as it was thought to be a layer of ECM surrounding the
embryo. Our data showing that the embryo can pull away from this layer when it
changes shape during cell division and analyzing the diffusion of mCherry::CPG-2
indicate that, rather than being an ECM layer, this region is a fluid-filled space
containing soluble proteins that is bounded by the permeability barrier; we
therefore prefer the term periembryonic space for this region. This nomenclature
reflects the characteristics of each layer and provides a consistent framework for
investigation of the molecular mechanisms driving assembly of the postfertilization
ECM.
Figure 9.
Model for assembly of the Schematic outline of sequential steps in
assembly of the eggshell and permeability barrier. The plasma membrane of
prefertilization oocytes is coated with an electron-dense vitelline layer.
Fertilization activates chitin synthase, which deposits a chitin layer
between the vitelline layer and plasma membrane. At anaphase of meiosis I,
cortical granules containing CPG-1 and CPG-2 are exocytosed in a wave that
proceeds from the anterior (left) to the posterior (right) of the embryo. As
cortical granules are exocytosed, the CPG layer is deposited, and a
perivitelline space opens up between the plasma membrane and eggshell.
Chitin synthase is internalized from the embryo surface after the onset of
cortical granule exocytosis. At anaphase of meiosis II, fatty acid
derivatives, possibly ascarosides, assemble between the eggshell and the
embryo surface to form the permeability barrier. Between the permeability
barrier and the embryo surface is the periembryonic space, which receives
the contents of vesicles exocytosed after anaphase of meiosis II.
Model for assembly of the Schematic outline of sequential steps in
assembly of the eggshell and permeability barrier. The plasma membrane of
prefertilization oocytes is coated with an electron-dense vitelline layer.
Fertilization activates chitin synthase, which deposits a chitin layer
between the vitelline layer and plasma membrane. At anaphase of meiosis I,
cortical granules containing CPG-1 and CPG-2 are exocytosed in a wave that
proceeds from the anterior (left) to the posterior (right) of the embryo. As
cortical granules are exocytosed, the CPG layer is deposited, and a
perivitelline space opens up between the plasma membrane and eggshell.
Chitin synthase is internalized from the embryo surface after the onset of
cortical granule exocytosis. At anaphase of meiosis II, fatty acid
derivatives, possibly ascarosides, assemble between the eggshell and the
embryo surface to form the permeability barrier. Between the permeability
barrier and the embryo surface is the periembryonic space, which receives
the contents of vesicles exocytosed after anaphase of meiosis II.
Chitin and the CPG-1/2 proteoglycans define the middle and inner eggshell
layers
CPG-1 and CPG-2 contain chitin-binding domains similar to those in the
peritrophins, which form a semipermeable gelatinous mixed matrix comprised of
chitin and proteoglycans that lines the insect gut (Lehane, 1997). Based on this precedent, we had expected
that either the middle or inner eggshell layers would be a composite matrix made
up of chitin and CPG-1/2. Instead, our data indicate that chitin is restricted
to the middle layer, and CPG-1/2 is restricted to the inner layer. This suggests
that rather than allowing formation of a mixed matrix within an eggshell layer,
the chitin-binding domains in CPG-1/2 serve to recruit them to the interface
between the chitin and CPG layers.We show that CPG-1 and -2 are redundantly required for assembly of the inner
eggshell layer and for separation of the chitin-containing shell from the plasma
membrane to open up the perivitelline space. We propose that this occurs through
binding of CPG-1/2 to the middle chitin layer, relieving adhesion between the
eggshell and embryo surface. The osmotic gradient generated by the polyanionicchondroitin chains and their counterions might then drive a hydration reaction
that transfers water from the embryo to the perivitelline space. Although CPG-1
anchored within the inner layer is sufficient to drive this reaction, the freely
diffusible population of CPG-2 in the perivitelline space might also contribute.
The proteoglycan hydration reaction we propose is similar to the reaction
previously proposed to lift the vitelline layer from the plasma membrane in sea
urchin embryos. In that case, cortical granules deliver glycosaminoglycans that
hydrate upon release, providing hydrostatic force that lifts the rapidly
expanding vitelline layer (Schuel et al.,
1974; Wong and Wessel,
2008). This similarity suggests general conservation of the mechanisms
used to drive layer separation during the formation of extracellular
coverings.
The permeability barrier maintains two distinct fluid-filled
microenvironments between the embryo and shell
The trilaminar shell does not block entry of small molecules but does prevent the
entry/exit of larger molecules, such as 3,000-D fluorescent dextran (Fig. 5 A). The trilaminar eggshell may thus
serve as a filter to prevent the entry of larger proteins/molecules from the
environment or, perhaps more significantly, to allow retention of exocytosed
molecules, such as CPG-2, within the perivitelline space. The more stringent
permeability barrier is formed by a distinct envelope built at anaphase of
meiosis II and encases the embryo. The perivitelline space contains proteins
exocytosed before anaphase of meiosis II, whereas proteins exocytosed after
anaphase of meiosis II are retained in the periembryonic space by the
permeability barrier. The presence of two concentric fluid-filled spaces, the
perivitelline space and the periembryonic space, may provide an ideally
cushioned and buffered environment for embryonic development.This view explains a previously puzzling observation that embryos depleted of
POD-1, a coronin that regulates both the actin cytoskeleton and membrane
trafficking, possess an extra eggshell layer adjacent to the embryo surface in
electron microscopy images (Rappleye et al.,
1999). By imaging mCherry::CPG-2, we found that although some
cortical granules were exocytosed at anaphase I in pod-1(RNAi)
embryos, the exocytosis of other granules was delayed until after anaphase of
meiosis II (Video
8). Thus, pod-1(RNAi) embryos form two CPG
layers, one based on exocytosis at the normal time and the second based on
exocytosis after formation of the permeability barrier.In addition to protecting the embryo by maintaining proper osmotic conditions and
preventing the entry of potentially harmful small molecules from the
environment, the permeability barrier may also allow the embryo to maintain
secreted molecules that signal between embryonic cells in close proximity. This
could explain in part why disrupting the eggshell permeability barrier
ultimately prevents normal development (Schierenberg and Junkersdorf, 1992; Lee and Goldstein, 2003; Carvalho et al., 2011).
The composition of the permeability barrier
Our work implicates enzymes required for fatty acid synthesis, sugar
modification, and acyl chain transfer in the formation of the permeability
barrier, suggesting that a key component of this layer may be a glycolipid.
Consistent with this, early observations in Parascaris equorum
demonstrated that the permeability barrier was composed of a fatty material with
a melting point of 72°C (Fauré-Fremiet, 1913). The fatty component was later extracted
from Ascaris lumbricoides and Meloidogyne
javanica and found to be very similar in properties to beeswax
(Chitwood, 1938; Christenson, 1950; Timm, 1950). Subsequent biochemical characterization
identified ascarosides, long-chain fatty acids with a head group containing one
or two ascarylose sugars, as the major lipid component of the permeability
barrier in A. lumbricoides species (Timm, 1950; Fouquey et
al., 1957; Jezyk and Fairbairn,
1967; Tarr and Fairbairn,
1973; Bartley et al., 1996).
Although the lipids that make up the C. elegans permeability
barrier have not yet been characterized, ascarosides remain attractive
candidates. C. elegans is known to make ascarosides with fatty
acid chains of varying lengths. Short fatty acid chain ascarosides act as
pheromones that promote mating and the dauer state (Butcher et al., 2009; Edison, 2009). A recent study reported the isolation of two
long-chain ascarosides from C. elegans but did not find a role
for these lipids in eggshell impermeability or dauer formation (Zagoriy et al., 2010). The enzymatic
machinery specifically required for ascaroside biosynthesis is largely
uncharacterized. We recently performed a functional screen that identified
components required for embryo impermeability (Carvalho et al., 2011). Among the components identified by this
screen were PERM-1 and DGTR-1. The analysis we perform here specifically
implicates these enzymes in formation of the permeability barrier, and their
domain structure strongly suggests a potential function in the ascaroside
synthesis pathway.In addition to its molecular composition, a second important question is how the
permeability barrier is formed. The permeability barrier forms after the
trilaminar shell, presumably by secretion of lipids from the embryo. Lipids
could accumulate on a protein scaffold on the inner eggshell layer and then peel
off to form a separate layer, or they could accumulate on a protein scaffold on
the embryo surface and subsequently lift up to form a separate layer. The
observation that CPG-2 remains strictly outside of the permeability barrier
after it forms causes us to favor the latter view because CPG-2 is exocytosed
before permeability barrier formation and diffuses freely within the
perivitelline space.
Placing the new view of eggshell and permeability barrier formation in a
historical context
Investigation of the nematode eggshell has a rich history dating back to 1850.
Light microscopy-based experiments of the eggshells of >40 nematode
species conducted between 1850 and 1950 are summarized in a chapter by Christenson (1950) in the classical book
“An Introduction to Nematology.” These early observations
partitioned the nematode eggshell into two key parts, a chitin-containing
“true shell” that conferred mechanical rigidity (Krakow, 1892; Chitwood, 1938; Christenson, 1950) and an inner curtainlike layer termed the
vitelline membrane that constituted the eggshell permeability barrier (Christenson, 1950). Concurrent with the
use of electron microscopy to characterize nematode eggshells in a variety of
species, this bipartite view was replaced with the idea of a single trilaminar
shell composed of an outer vitelline layer (distinct from the vitelline membrane
in the original view), a middle chitin layer, and an inner lipid-rich layer
(also called the ascaroside layer; Rogers,
1956; Foor, 1967; Bird, 1971; Wharton, 1980). In this modern view, the permeability
barrier was the inner layer of the trilaminar shell, rather than a distinct
membrane between the eggshell and the embryo surface (Wharton, 1980; Mansfield et al., 1992; Rappleye
et al., 1999; Bembenek et al.,
2007; Benenati et al.,
2009).Our results using correlative light and electron microscopy demonstrate that the
permeability barrier is not the inner layer of the trilaminar shell but a
separate envelope akin to the vitelline membrane described in the older work. We
show that fatty acid synthesis/modification enzymes are required for formation
of the permeability barrier, suggesting that the permeability barrier, rather
than the inner layer of the trilaminar shell, contains lipids. The idea of a
separate vitelline membrane was lost coincident with the advent of studies
examining the eggshell by electron microscopy (Rogers, 1956; Foor, 1967;
Bird, 1971; Wharton, 1980), likely caused by the difficulty in
preserving and identifying this structure in chemically preserved specimens. The
large body of work on nematode eggshells highlights intriguing similarities in
eggshell formation across nematode species, suggesting that dissecting eggshell
formation in C. elegans will provide insights that will be
useful in combating parasitic species.
Materials and methods
C. elegans strains
All strains (genotypes listed in Table
S1) were maintained at 20°C. The cpg-1
and cpg-2 deletion mutants were outcrossed 6× before
analysis and marker introduction. The strains OD58 (GFP plasma membrane marker;
Audhya et al., 2005), TH32
(GFP::histone H2B and GFP::γ-tubulin; Desai et al., 2003), AZ212 (GFP::histone H2B; Praitis et al., 2001), and AD265 (GFP::CHS-1; Maruyama et al., 2007) have been
described previously. MSN-100 (GFP::CAV-1), which is similar to the strain
originally described in Sato et al.
(2006), was a gift of A. Audhya (University of Wisconsin, Madison,
WI). Fluorescent proteins were expressed from the pie-1
promoter and 3′ untranslated region regulatory elements. Some nematode
strains used in this work were provided by the Caenorhabditis Genetics Center,
which is funded by the National Institutes of Health National Center for
Research Resources.
Plasmids and transgenic strains
N-terminal mCherry expression constructs were engineered starting from pIC26
(Cheeseman et al., 2004). The
pie-1 5′ and 3′ regulatory information and
GFP coding sequence were removed by digesting pIC26 with NotI, religating, then
digesting with BamHI and KpnI, and religating after blunting with the Klenow
large fragment (New England Biolabs, Inc.). mCherry preceded by the CPG-1 signal
peptide sequence was introduced by using the primer pairs
5′-GCGGCCGCGGTACCACTCTCAAGCCAGTTCTTCTTGCATTCCTTGTTGCATCGGCCTACGCAATGGTCTCAAAGGGTGAAGAAGAT-3′
and 5′-GCGGCCGCCTTATACAATTCATCCATGCCACC-3′ to
amplify mCherry from pAA65 (McNally et al.,
2006) and cloning this into the NotI site to generate plasmid pSO22.
The plasmids pSO31 and pSO33, which encode mCherry::CPG-1
(5′-GGTACCGAATTTCAACCTTCATGCTCGAACTTATTCG-3′,
5′-GGTACCCATCCTACTGAAAATAGAAATTCAATAGGGT-3′,
5′-ACTAGTGGTGTAGCTGGAATGTATGAGAATCTGCCA-3′,
and 5′-ACTAGTCTCCATCCACACAAAAATCACCAGCTG-3′) and
mCherry::CPG-2
(5′-GGTACCGTGCCTCATGAACTTTCGGCATCA-3′,
5′-GGTACCCATCCTCCTGAAATAAAGATCTTTAAGAAAAGAGAACAA-3′,
5′-ACTAGTCAGTTCCTTCAAGACTGTACAAACGC-3′, and
5′-ACTAGTGGGTCGCAATTGAGGCTTTTACCACTC-3′),
respectively, were generated by using the primer pairs in parentheses to amplify
the promoters and ORFs/3′ untranslated regions from genomic DNA and
cloning into the KpnI and SpeI sites of pSO22. The SpeI site in the
cpg-1 promoter was mutated from ACTAGT to ACTAGG before
cloning using the mutagenesis kit (QuikChange II; Agilent Technologies).Transgenic lines were created by microparticle bombardment of pSO31 and pSO33
(Praitis et al., 2001). For each
bombardment, 6 mg of 2.0-µm gold beads were placed in a siliconized
1.5-ml microfuge tube. Beads were sequentially washed with 1 ml of 70% ethanol
and 1 ml double-distilled H2O. For each wash, the beads were vortexed
for 5 min, allowed to settle for 1 min, and spun in a microfuge for ∼5 s
before removing the supernatant. Beads were resuspended in 100 µl of 50%
glycerol and vortexed for 5 min. 10 µl plasmid DNA at a concentration of
1–2 mg/ml was added, and the tube was vortexed for 60 s. 100 µl of
2.5-M CaCl2 was added, and the tube was vortexed for 60 s. 40
µl of 0.1-M spermidine was added, and the tube was vortexed for 3 min.
Beads were settled for 1 min and spun in a minimicrofuge for ∼5 s, and
the supernatant was removed. 300 µl of 70% ethanol was added, the beads
were vortexed for 1 min, settled for 1 min, and spun in a microfuge for
∼5 s, and the supernatant was removed. 150 µl of 100% ethanol was
added, and the beads were vortexed for 3 min before placing 20 µl of
beads onto the center of macrocarriers (Bio-Rad Laboratories). After the
solution had dried, macrocarriers were placed into an adapter (Hepta; Bio-Rad
Laboratories) and used to bombard pellets of DP38 worms on a 100-mm worm plate
according to the manufacturer’s instructions. DP38 worms were grown on
100-mm C600/peptone plates until just starved. Worms were washed in M9,
resuspended in 1 ml M9, pipetted onto spots on a 100-mm worm plate aligned with
the Hepta adapter, and allowed to dry until the liquid was just absorbed. Worms
rescued from paralysis because of the presence of the
unc-119(+)–rescuing fragment in the plasmids
were screened for expression of the fluorescence construct.
Antibody production
To generate antibodies to CPG-1
(5′-GAATTCGACTGTTCCACGAAGGAAGACGGAC-3′ and
5′-GCGGCCGCATTCGTGCACTCTGGAACATTCATAACG-3′)
and CPG-2 (5′-GAATTCGAGCCAACATGCGAAGGAAAAGC-3′ and
5′-GCGGCCGCTTGGCATTCGGAAACATTGGACTCG-3′), the
primer pairs in parentheses were used to amplify regions corresponding to amino
acids 60–268 of CPG-1 and 244–360 of CPG-2 from C.
elegans cDNA. Fragments were cloned into the EcoRI and NotI sites
of pGEX6P-1 (GE Healthcare). GST fusions were purified, and the GST was removed
using a fusion protein (PreScission Protease; GE Healthcare) before outsourcing
the proteins for injection into rabbits (Robert Sargeant Antibodies). Antibodies
were purified using standard procedures (Harlow and Lane, 1988) on a 1-ml
N-hydroxysuccinimide HiTrap column (GE Healthcare) containing
the immobilized GST fusions. The antibody raised against CPG-1 (Ab153)
recognizes both CPG-1 and CPG-2, whereas the antibody raised against CPG-2
(Ab154) specifically recognizes CPG-2 (Fig. S1 A).
Immunofluorescence
Immunofluorescence was performed as previously described (Monen et al., 2005) with the following modifications.
Embryos and gonads were dissected onto subbing solution-coated glass slides in
0.75× egg salts (88.5 mM NaCl, 30 mM KCl, 2.55 mM MgCl2, 2.55
mM CaCl2, and 3.75 mM Hepes, pH 7.4), freeze cracked, and fixed in
−20°C methanol for 15 min. Slides were processed for
immunofluorescence using a 1:100 dilution of rhodamine-conjugated chitin-binding
probe (New England Biolabs, Inc.) or 1 µg/ml each of primary antibody
(Ab153 or Ab154) followed by 1 µg/ml Cy3-labeled secondary antibody. DNA
was stained with 1 µg/ml Hoechst. Images were acquired using a
100×, 1.35 NA U-Plan Apochromat oil objective lens (Olympus) and
charge-coupled device (CCD) camera (CoolSNAP; Roper Scientific) mounted on a
microscope (DeltaVision; Applied Precision). Deconvolution and image processing
was performed with softWoRx software (Applied Precision). DNA and gonad images
are projections of multiple 2-µm z sections, whereas eggshell images are
of a central plane.
RNA-mediated interference
Double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs) were prepared by using the oligonucleotides listed
in Table
S2 to PCR amplify regions from N2 genomic DNA. PCR reactions were
cleaned (QIAGEN) and used as templates for 50 µl T3 and T7 transcription
reactions (MEGAscript; Invitrogen). Transcription products were mixed, purified
by phenol-chloroform extraction, and annealed by resuspending the RNA pellet in
soaking buffer (11 mM Na2HPO4, 5.5 mM
KH2PO4, 2.1 mM NaCl, and 4.7 mM NH4Cl) and
incubating at 68°C for 10 min followed by 37°C for 30 min (Oegema et al., 2001; Green et al., 2011). L4-stage
hermaphrodites were injected with dsRNA and incubated for 6–48 h at
16–20°C before live imaging.
Live imaging
Embryos were dissected in 4 µl of 0.7–0.8× egg salts
(empirically determined daily; Tagawa et al.,
2001) to provide osmotic support and filmed without compression on a
24 × 60–mm coverslip mounted on a metal holder (Monen et al., 2005). For permeability
experiments, FM4-64 was added to the medium at a final concentration of
3.3–6.6 µM. To prevent compression, a ring of Vaseline was placed
around the embryos, and the chamber was sealed with a 22 × 22–mm
coverslip. Alternatively, for the cul-2(RNAi) experiment (Fig. 4 D), embryos were dissected and
filmed in a microfluidics chamber (Carvalho et
al., 2011). Embryos were imaged on one of three microscope systems:
(1) an inverted spinning-disc confocal microscope (TE2000-E; Nikon) equipped
with a solid-state laser combiner (ALC; Andor Technology) and CCD camera (Clara;
Andor Technology) controlled by iQ software (Andor Technology) with 2 × 2
binning, (2) an inverted spinning-disc confocal microscope (Observer.Z1; Carl
Zeiss) equipped with a CCD camera (QuantEM; Photometrics) without binning, or
(3) a upright microscope (Eclipse E800; Nikon) equipped with a CCD camera
(ORCA-ER; Hamamatsu Photonics) controlled by MetaMorph software (Molecular
Devices) without binning. In all cases, images were acquired of a single central
plane with a 60×, 1.4 NA Plan Apochromat objective lens and were analyzed
with either MetaMorph or ImageJ (National Institutes of Health) software.
FRAP
Photobleaching was performed using a FRAPPA module (Andor Technology) on the
spinning-disc microscope (TE2000-E) described in the previous section. Embryos
were photobleached for 3× 1-s intervals and followed for 15 min
(mCherry::CPG-1) or 2 min (mCherry::CPG-2) after bleaching to monitor
fluorescence recovery. For each time point, the total fluorescence was measured
in equal area circles in bleached and nonbleached (control) regions of the
eggshell (mCherry::CPG-1) or perivitelline space (mCherry::CPG-2). Background
fluorescence was the mean fluorescence intensity of an equal-sized area in the
embryo interior over the three frames immediately before photobleaching and was
subtracted from the values for each time point. Fraction of initial fluorescence
was calculated by dividing the total fluorescence intensity at a given time
point by the mean total fluorescence intensity of the three time points
immediately preceding the photobleach.
High-pressure freezing and electron microscopy
Whole worms or isolated early embryos were cryoimmobilized using a high-pressure
freezer with rapid transfer system (EMPACT2; Leica). For optimal morphology,
samples were freeze substituted at −90°C for 20 h in anhydrous
acetone containing 1% osmium tetroxide and 0.1% uranyl acetate. The temperature
was progressively raised to room temperature over 22 h in an automatic freeze
substitution machine (EM AFS; Leica), and samples were embedded in thin,
optically clear layers of Epon/Araldite resin. For this, samples were evenly
distributed on microscope slides coated with Teflon (MS-122DF; Miller Stephenson
Chemical Co.). A second coated microscope slide was placed on top, and this
“sandwich” was polymerized at 60°C for 2 d (Müller-Reichert et al., 2003,
2007). The top glass slide was
removed for ultramicrotomy. For immunolabeling, specimens were freeze
substituted in 0.2% glutaraldehyde and 0.1% uranyl acetate and embedded in LR
white (Müller-Reichert et al.,
2003). A microscope slide was coated with Teflon, and a piece of a
22-mm square (Thermanox; Thermo Fisher Scientific) from which an 18-mm square
had been removed from the center was glued to the slide with a Krazy Glue pen
and allowed to dry for ≥1 h. Worms in pure LR white resin were placed in
the 18-mm square cavity and covered with a 25-mm square piece of Aclar. The
slide was placed in a container flooded with dry nitrogen gas, which was sealed
and put into a 60°C oven for 1–2 d. The Aclar plastic was peeled
off, and selected worms were cut out and remounted for sectioning. Thin sections
(70 nm) were cut using a microtome (Ultracut UCT; Leica) and collected on
Formvar-coated copper grids. Immunoelectron microscopy of CPG-1 and CPG-2 was
performed using 1:500 dilutions of primary antibodies Ab153 and Ab154 and a 1:35
dilution of a secondary goat anti–rabbit antibody coupled to 10-nm
colloidal gold (Kirkham et al., 2003).
Immunoelectron microscopy of chitin was performed by incubating with a 1:50
dilution of maltose-binding protein–tagged chitin-binding probe (New
England Biolabs, Inc.) followed by a 1:50 dilution of an antibody to
maltose-binding protein (New England Biolabs, Inc.) and detection with a 1:35
dilution of goat anti–mouse antibody coupled to 10-nm colloidal gold.
Sections were poststained with 2% uranyl acetate in 70% methanol followed by
aqueous lead citrate and viewed in a transmission electron microscope (Tecnai
12; FEI) operated at 100 kV.
Online supplemental material
Fig. S1, which is related to Fig. 1, shows
that CPG-1 and CPG-2 localize to puncta in oocytes of the proximal gonad and to
the embryonic eggshell. Fig. S2, which is related to Fig. 2, shows that CPG-1 is stably incorporated into the
inner layer of the eggshell, whereas CPG-2 rapidly diffuses within the
perivitelline space. Video 1 shows that mCherry::CPG-1 failed to recover after
photobleaching, indicating it was stably incorporated into the eggshell. Video 2
shows rapid recovery of mCherry::CPG-2 after photobleaching, indicating it was
soluble in the perivitelline space. Video 3 shows that GFP::CHS-1 internalized
from the plasma membrane coincident with cortical granule exocytosis at anaphase
of meiosis I. Video 4 shows the formation of scallops caused by plasma membrane
adhesion to the eggshell at anaphase of meiosis I in a
cpg-1/2(RNAi) embryo. Video 5 shows rupture of an embryo
through the eggshell in a chs-1(RNAi) embryo. Video 6 shows the
permeability barrier was malleable and continually changing shape, suggesting it
behaves more like a tightly drawn blanket than a rigid ECM layer. Video 7 shows
prolonged cortical granule exocytosis in a kca-1(RNAi) embryo.
Video 8 shows prolonged cortical granule exocytosis in a
pod-1(RNAi) embryo. Table S1 lists the C.
elegans strains used in this study. Table S2 lists the dsRNAs used
in this study. Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.201206008/DC1.