Caroline A Spike1, Donna Coetzee1, Carly Eichten1, Xin Wang2, Dave Hansen2, David Greenstein3. 1. Department of Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455. 2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 1N4. 3. Department of Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455 green959@umn.edu.
Abstract
In many animals, oocytes enter meiosis early in their development but arrest in meiotic prophase I. Oocyte growth, which occurs during this arrest period, enables the acquisition of meiotic competence and the capacity to produce healthy progeny. Meiotic resumption, or meiotic maturation, involves the transition to metaphase I (M phase) and is regulated by intercellular signaling and cyclin-dependent kinase activation. Premature meiotic maturation would be predicted to diminish fertility as the timing of this event, which normally occurs after oocyte growth is complete, is crucial. In the accompanying article in this issue, we identify the highly conserved TRIM-NHL protein LIN-41 as a translational repressor that copurifies with OMA-1 and OMA-2, RNA-binding proteins redundantly required for normal oocyte growth and meiotic maturation. In this article, we show that LIN-41 enables the production of high-quality oocytes and plays an essential role in controlling and coordinating oocyte growth and meiotic maturation. lin-41 null mutants display a striking defect that is specific to oogenesis: pachytene-stage cells cellularize prematurely and fail to progress to diplotene. Instead, these cells activate CDK-1, enter M phase, assemble spindles, and attempt to segregate chromosomes. Translational derepression of the CDK-1 activator CDC-25.3 appears to contribute to premature M-phase entry in lin-41 mutant oocytes. Genetic and phenotypic analyses indicate that LIN-41 and OMA-1/2 exhibit an antagonistic relationship, and we suggest that translational regulation by these proteins could be important for controlling and coordinating oocyte growth and meiotic maturation.
In many animals, oocytes enter meiosis early in their development but arrest in meiotic prophase I. Oocyte growth, which occurs during this arrest period, enables the acquisition of meiotic competence and the capacity to produce healthy progeny. Meiotic resumption, or meiotic maturation, involves the transition to metaphase I (M phase) and is regulated by intercellular signaling and cyclin-dependent kinase activation. Premature meiotic maturation would be predicted to diminish fertility as the timing of this event, which normally occurs after oocyte growth is complete, is crucial. In the accompanying article in this issue, we identify the highly conserved TRIM-NHL protein LIN-41 as a translational repressor that copurifies with OMA-1 and OMA-2, RNA-binding proteins redundantly required for normal oocyte growth and meiotic maturation. In this article, we show that LIN-41 enables the production of high-quality oocytes and plays an essential role in controlling and coordinating oocyte growth and meiotic maturation. lin-41 null mutants display a striking defect that is specific to oogenesis: pachytene-stage cells cellularize prematurely and fail to progress to diplotene. Instead, these cells activate CDK-1, enter M phase, assemble spindles, and attempt to segregate chromosomes. Translational derepression of the CDK-1 activator CDC-25.3 appears to contribute to premature M-phase entry in lin-41 mutant oocytes. Genetic and phenotypic analyses indicate that LIN-41 andOMA-1/2 exhibit an antagonistic relationship, and we suggest that translational regulation by these proteins could be important for controlling and coordinating oocyte growth and meiotic maturation.
THE program of oocyte development depends on two key subroutines: one governing oocyte differentiation and a second controlling progression through the meiotic pathway of development (reviewed by Kim ). A characteristic aspect of oocyte differentiation is growth: oocytes are often among the largest cells in an organism. The process of oocyte growth ensures the maternal inheritance of cellular organelles and factors essential for embryonic development, including ribosomes, ER, Golgi, mitochondria, cytoplasmic determinants, maternal messenger RNAs (mRNAs), and gene products essential for “housekeeping” functions, among many others. A second defining feature of animal oogenesis is meiotic arrest: developing oocytes arrest in meiotic prophase I, and oocytes typically grow during this period of arrest (reviewed by Masui and Clarke 1979; Downs 2010; Kim ). Oocytes resume meiosis in the process of meiotic maturation, which is often regulated by hormonal signaling and soma–germline interactions. Meiotic maturation involves the transition to metaphase I (M phase), and its hallmarks are nuclear envelope breakdown, cortical cytoskeletal rearrangement, and meiotic spindle assembly. Activation of the Cdk1/cyclin B kinase (maturation-promoting factor) is sufficient to drive prophase-arrested oocytes into M phase (reviewed by Nurse 1990; Masui 2001). Meiotic resumption must be tightly regulated to ensure that only fully grown oocytes of the highest quality mature. The mechanisms that control and coordinate oocyte growth and meiotic maturation are incompletely understood.Caenorhabditis elegans provides an attractive system for studies of oogenesis because the adult hermaphrodite gonad is spatially organized (Supporting Information, Figure S1). The differentiating progeny of germline stem cells enter meiosis distally and form oocytes as they progress proximally. As in other organisms, intercellular signaling plays a major role in organizing the development and function of the gonad (reviewed by Lesch and Page 2012; Hansen and Schedl 2013; Kim ). The oocyte in the most proximal position (–1 oocyte) undergoes meiotic maturation in response to the major sperm protein (MSP) hormone (McCarter ; Miller ). The presence of sperm in the gonad also stimulates oocyte formation (Ward and Carrel 1979). MSP signaling promotes the actomyosin-dependent cytoplasmic flows that drive oocyte growth (Wolke ; Nadarajan ). This mode of regulation ensures that meiotic maturation and ovulation occur in assembly-line fashion when sperm are available for fertilization. Extracellular MSP exhibits a graded distribution in the proximal gonad arm (Kosinski ), but this seems an insufficient explanation for the spatial restriction of meiotic maturation because more distally located oocytes (i.e., the oocytes in the –2 and –3 positions) often exhibit molecular evidence of MSP signal reception. For example, these distal oocytes often display mitogen-dependent protein kinase (MAPK) activation, the localization of the Aurora B AIR-2 kinase to chromatin, and rearrangement of the microtubule cytoskeleton (Miller ; Harris ; Lee ; Govindan ). The mechanisms that might restrict meiotic maturation to the –1 oocyte are poorly understood but are thought to involve a combination of intercellular signaling and germline intrinsic mechanisms (see McCarter ; Harris ; Kim for a discussion).Studies of C. elegans , which encodes a STAR-family RNA-binding protein, provide a precedent for how germline-intrinsic mechanisms might coordinate oocyte differentiation and meiotic progression (Francis ,b; Jones and Schedl 1995; Jones ). In null mutants, oogenesis is abolished: germ cells that adopt a female sexual fate do not exhibit any evidence of oocyte differentiation (Francis ,b; Jones ). Instead, mutant female germ cells exit from the pachytene stage of meiotic prophase and reenter mitosis, resulting in the formation of a germline tumor (Francis ,b). GLD-1 functions in part to promote oocyte differentiation by repressing the translation of mRNA targets (Lee and Schedl 2001, 2004; Schumacher ; Biedermann ; Wright ). In this work, we investigate the mechanisms that coordinately regulate oocyte growth and spatially restrict meiotic maturation in C. elegans. In the accompanying article in this issue (Spike ), we affinity-purified ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs) containing the TIS11 zinc-finger RNA-binding proteins OMA-1 and OMA-2 (referred to as the OMA proteins), which are redundantly required for meiotic maturation (Detwiler ). The TRIM-NHL protein LIN-41 was identified as a component of OMA-1-containing ribonucleoprotein particles (OMA RNPs), and it participates in 3′ UTR-mediated translational repression (Spike ). Here we reveal LIN-41 as an essential regulator of the oocyte fate that promotes oocyte growth, inhibits M-phase entry, and maintains oocyte quality. Taken together with the results of the accompanying article in this issue (Spike ), these studies reveal OMA RNPs as key regulators of oogenesis coordinately required for the control of oocyte growth and the proper spatial and temporal execution of the meiotic maturation decision.
Materials and Methods
Strains
The genotypes of strains used in this study are reported in Table S1. The following mutations were used: LGI—, , , , , ts), ts, ts, ts, ts, ::tev::s::lin-41]), and ; LGII—, , and ; LGIII—, ts), ts), , , and ; LGIV—), , , and ; LGV— and ; LGX—ts). The following rearrangements were used: (I;III), II, and (IV; V). The following complex-array transgenes and transgene insertions were used: ::gfp, myo-2p::TdTomato], , myo-2p::TdTomato], ::gfp::sas-6 (Leidel ), unc-119(+)], ::mCherry::H2B::pie-1 3′ UTR, unc-119(+)] (McNally ), and ::gfp] V (Altun-Gultekin ).
Antibody preparation and purification
cDNA sequences were cloned into the Escherichia coli expression vector pMal-c2 to create an inducible fusion protein wherein maltose-binding protein (MBP) was fused to amino acids 203–420 of LIN-41 (MBP::LIN-41). MBP::LIN-41 was column- and gel-purified and used to immunize both guinea pigs andrabbits. Immunizations and sera collection were performed using standard protocols (Cocalico Biologicals, Reamstown, PA). Guinea pig antibodies (GP49, GP50) were affinity-purified on an MBP::LIN-41-coupled column after antibodies recognizing MBP were removed. Rabbit antibodies (R214) were similarly affinity-purified after antibodies recognizing MBP, E. coli proteins, andC. elegans proteins in a lysate made from sterile ts) adults were removed. All purified antibodies recognize LIN-41 on Western blots and exhibit similar patterns by immunofluorescence in adult hermaphrodite germ lines.
Immunofluorescence, fluorescent labeling, and microscopy
Dissected gonads stained with the following antibodies were fixed in 3% paraformaldehyde as described (Rose ) with some modifications. Gonads stained with tetramethylrhodamine-labeled phalloidin (Molecular Probes, 0.165 μM) were treated post-fix with acetone (2 min) instead of methanol. Gonads stained with rat anti-tubulin (YL1/2; 1:100; Accurate Chemical) often used a modified fixation buffer composed of 75 mM PIPES (pH 6.9) to help preserve microtubules. Gonads stained with goat anti-SYP-1 (1:4000; kindly provided by Abby Dernburg, University of California-Berkeley) andrabbit anti-SYP-2 (1:500; also provided by Abby Dernburg) were fixed with 1% paraformaldehyde for 10 min. Other primary antibodies were a mixture of two purified mouse monoclonal anti-MSP antibodies (each at 1:300) (Kosinski ), rabbit anti-RME-2 antibody (1:50; kindly provided by B. Grant, Rutgers University) (Grant and Hirsh 1999), rabbit anti-phospho-histone H3 (Ser10; 1:400; Millipore), guinea pig anti-LMN-1 (1:800; kindly provided by J. Liu, Cornell University) (Liu ), mouse anti-MAPKYT (1:400; Sigma), andguinea pig anti-LIN-41 (1:100; this work). Secondary antibodies were Alexa 488-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit (1:500; Jackson ImmunoResearch), Alexa 488-conjugated goat anti-rabbit (1:500; Life Technologies), Cy3-conjugated donkey anti-goat (1:500; Jackson ImmunoResearch), Cy3-conjugated goat anti-mouse (1:500; Jackson ImmunoResearch), Cy3-conjugated goat anti-rat (1:500; Jackson ImmunoResearch), Cy3-conjugated goat anti-rabbit (1:500; Jackson ImmunoResearch), and DyLight 488-conjugated donkey anti-guinea pig (1:500; Jackson ImmunoResearch). 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) was used to detect DNA. Acridine orange staining was performed as described (Gartner ) using 0.5 ml of a 20 μg/ml acridine orange solution (Fisher Scientific). DIC and fluorescent images were acquired on a Zeiss motorized Axioplan 2 microscope with either a 40× Plan-Neofluar (numerical aperture 1.3) or a 63× Plan-Apochromat (numerical aperture 1.4) objective lens using a AxioCam MRm camera and AxioVision software (Zeiss). Imaging of gonads stained with SYP-1, SYP-2, andphalloidin used an apotome adaptor (Zeiss), as did a few other experiments, as indicated in the figure legends.Dissected gonads stained with rabbit anti-GLD-1 (1:100; kindly provided by T. Schedl, Washington University School of Medicine) (Jones ), mouse anti-CYE-1 (1:20; kindly provided by E. Kipreos, University of Georgia) (Brodigan ), rat anti-REC-8 (1:200; kindly provided by J. Loidl, University of Vienna) (Pasierbek ), andrabbit anti-HIM-3 (1:500; kindly provided by M. Zetka, McGill University, Montreal) (Zetka ) were fixed and stained as described (Jones ; Hansen ,b). Fluorescent images were captured using a Zeiss Imager Z.1 microscope with an AxioCam MRm camera (Zeiss).
Western blots
Proteins were separated using NuPage 4-12% Bis–Tris gels (Invitrogen) and visualized after western blotting. Primary antibodies used to detect proteins were guinea pig anti-LIN-41 (1:2000; this work) andmouse monoclonal anti-actin C4 (1:80,000; MP Biomedicals). Secondary antibodies used for western blots were peroxidase-conjugated donkey anti-guinea pig (Jackson ImmunoResearch) andgoat anti-mouse (Pierce) antibodies diluted 1:60,000.
Genetic screen for new alleles of lin-41
L4-stage ts) animals were mutagenized with EMS at 15° and shifted to 25° as adults. An estimated 60,000–120,000 F1 progeny were screened for dominant suppressors of larval lethality. Suppressor mutations with recessive phenotypes (e.g., sterile or dumpy) that could be balanced by the (I;III) rearrangement, and suppressor mutations with no phenotype, were tested for their ability to complement . Suppressors of ts) sterility were selected in the F2 generation following EMS mutagenesis. Four intragenic revertants were isolated from ∼300,000 EMS-mutagenized haploid genomes.
GFP-tagging LIN-41 in genomic and fosmid contexts
To fuse GFP::TEV::S (Cheeseman and Desai 2005) at the N terminus of endogenous LIN-41, we targeted a specific site near the initiator methionine for Cas9 scission [protospacer-associated motif (PAM) site at position 9341872 in the genome] with a single-guide RNA (sgRNA). Primers U6prom EcoRI F/lin-41gRNAR andlin-41gRNAF/U6prom HindIII R were used to generate overlapping PCR products that could be amplified and used to replace the EcoRI/HindIII insert in pU6::unc-119sgRNA to generate pU6::lin-41sgRNA1 following Friedland . To generate a repair template (pCE2-2), a 5′- homology arm was generated by PCR using primers GA-B52 and GA-1R and a fosmid (WRM064dG06) as template. To generate the 3′- homology arm, nested PCR was performed using primers and , followed by GA-B3 and GA-3F. The gfp::tev::s insert was generated by PCR using primers GA-2F and GA-2R with pIC26 as the template. A four-piece Gibson assembly (New England BioLabs) was used to stitch together the 5′- homology arm, the gfp::tev::s insert, the 3′- homology arm, and the pBluescript KS– vector, digested with SacI and KpnI. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed using a Q5 site-directed mutagenesis kit (New England BioLabs) and primers C13-PAMF and C13-PAMR to alter the PAM site from TTGG to CTTG without changing the coding sequence of LIN-41. For transformation, the pCE2-2 repair template (100 ng/μl), the sgRNA1 construct (100 ng/μl), the Peft-3::Cas9-SV40 NLS::tbb-2 3′ UTR (150 ng/μl), and a myo-2p::TdTomato marker (4 ng/μl) were microinjected into 58 wild-type adult hermaphrodites. Two independent targeted lines were isolated from screening the progeny of 452 F1 transgenic animals using a 40× Plan-Neofluar (numerical aperture 1.3) objective lens on a Zeiss Axioskop microscope. The alleles ::tev::s::lin-41]) and ::tev::s::lin-41]) were validated by PCR and sequencing and outcrossed three times against the wild type. The brood size of ::tev::s::lin-41]) was measured and found to be 319 ± 28 (n = 30). Primer sequences used were the following: lin-41gRNAF—5′-GACCATCGTGCCATGCTCATGTTTTAGAGCTAGAAATAGCAAGTTA-3′; lin-41gRNAR—5′-ATGAGCATGGCACGATGGTCAAACATTTAGATTTGCAATTCAATTATATAG-3′; GA-B52—5′-CTATAGGGCGAATTGGAGCTCGTGTGTAGAGAGTGGGAACGAC-3′; GA-1R—5′-CTGCAGCCCGGGGGATCCCATTTCACTTTTTCCAAGTCTGAAAAG-3′; lin-41-1F—5′-CGGGAATGCGACGTTGGAAACG-3′; lin-41-1R—5′-ACTAAATTGGCCCTCCGACT-3′; GA-B3—5′-AGGGAACAAAAGCTGGGTACCGTCGTGTTGAGACGCAAAAAGC-3′; GA-3F—5′-CATGGACAGCGGAGGTGGAGGTATGGCGACCATCGTGCCATGC-3′; GA-2F—5′-CTTTTCAGACTTGGAAAAAGTGAAATGGGATCCCCCGGGCTGCAG-3′; GA-2R—5′-GCATGGCACGATGGTCGCCATACCTCCACCTCCGCTGTCCATG-3′; C13-PAMF—5′-GCCATGCTCACTTGAGAAAGAAGAAG-3′; and C13-PAMR—5′-ACGATGGTCGCCATACCT-3′; other primer sequences are available on request.Transgenic animals expressing lin-41::gfp were generated using recombineering (Warming ; Tursun ) and microinjection (Stinchcomb ). To create the C-terminal LIN-41::GFP fusion, the fosmid WRM064dG06 was used. lin-41::gfp or unmodified fosmid (1 μg/ml) were injected into animals along with ScaI-digested N2 genomic DNA (100 μg/ml) andmyo-2p::TdTomato (2 μg/ml), a co-injection marker. sterility was rescued by the unmodified fosmid but not rescued by lin-41(fosmid)::gfp.
RNA interference and 5-ethynyl-2′-deoxyuridine incorporation
Gene-specific RNA interference (RNAi) was performed by feeding C. elegans with double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-expressing E. coli (Timmons and Fire 1998) at 22° using the RNAi culture media described by Govindan . The identity of RNAi clones was verified by DNA sequencing. Exposure to dsRNA-expressing E. coli was initiated at the beginning of the first larval stage in experiments and during the fourth larval stage in , , and experiments. Adult animals (24 hr past mid-L4 at 22°) that had been exposed to or control bacteria containing a nontargeting RNAi vector were individually picked, washed, and transferred to 5-ethynyl-2′-deoxyuridine- (EdU)-labeled MG1693 bacteria for 4 hr, followed by immediate gonad dissection and fixation. Incorporated EdU was detected after gonad dissection using an Alexa 488 Click-iT EdU detection kit (Invitrogen). MG1693 bacteria that had incorporated EdU were prepared as described (Ito and McGhee 1987; Fox ).
Results
lin-41 promotes oocyte growth and meiotic progression
Phenotypic analyses of a strong loss-of-function allele previously demonstrated that adults are sterile: they lack normal oocytes but make apparently normal sperm (Slack ). LIN-41 protein was also isolated as a component of OMA RNPs (Spike ), and the OMA proteins are expressed in oocytes (Detwiler ). Together, these observations suggest that LIN-41 might be required in oocytes for normal oogenesis. To determine the basis for the sterile phenotype, we examined strong loss-of-function and reduction-of-function alleles. Strong loss-of-function alleles confer somatic heterochronic defects, including molting defects that make the animals sickly and complicate analysis of the germ line. Since passage through the dauer stage of development suppresses several heterochronic mutations (Liu and Ambros 1991; Abrahante ), we analyzed germline phenotypes in strong loss-of-function mutant animals that had developed through the alternative dauer larval stage. Post-dauer-recovered mutant animals have some somatic defects, including a short and fat (Dumpy) body shape, but are much healthier than animals that do not pass through the dauer stage. post-dauer animals are also completely sterile with large germ lines that are easier to analyze. Essentially all of the germline phenotypes that we describe are also observed in non-postdauer animals [e.g., and ts) at 25°]; none appear to depend on life history. A more limited analysis of non-postdauer adults involving an assessment of the oocyte fate andDAPI staining of dissected gonads (n = 9) (Figure 1, A and B) is consistent with this conclusion.
Figure 1
Sterile lin-41 animals produce sperm and small, abnormal oocytes. (A and B) Immunofluorescence staining identifies sperm (red, MSP) and oocytes (green, RME-2) in wild-type (A) and lin-41(n2914) mutant germ lines (B). (C–F) OMA-1::GFP is present in both control (C and D) and lin-41(RNAi) oocytes (E and F), but the most proximal cells lose expression of OMA-1::GFP and no embryos form. (G and H) Phalloidin stain of the actin cytoskeleton (red) of wild-type (G) and lin-41(n2914) (H) post-dauer (pd) adult gonads reveals that the rachis narrows (single asterisk in H) and appears to terminate (double asterisk in H) around the time when lin-41 germ cells exit from pachytene. The last oocyte connected to the rachis in the wild type is indicated by an arrow (G). All insets are magnified two-fold relative to the main images (G and H). Insets in G show examples of pachytene, diplotene, and diakinesis nuclei. Insets in H show pachytene-stage nuclei (1), abnormal nuclei immediately after exit from pachytene (2), and more proximal nuclei (3). Abnormal nuclei have condensed (arrowheads) or decondensed chromosomes. Bar, 20 μm.
Sterile lin-41 animals produce sperm and small, abnormal oocytes. (A and B) Immunofluorescence staining identifies sperm (red, MSP) and oocytes (green, RME-2) in wild-type (A) andlin-41(n2914) mutant germ lines (B). (C–F) OMA-1::GFP is present in both control (C and D) andlin-41(RNAi) oocytes (E and F), but the most proximal cells lose expression of OMA-1::GFP and no embryos form. (G and H) Phalloidin stain of the actin cytoskeleton (red) of wild-type (G) andlin-41(n2914) (H) post-dauer (pd) adult gonads reveals that the rachis narrows (single asterisk in H) and appears to terminate (double asterisk in H) around the time when lin-41 germ cells exit from pachytene. The last oocyte connected to the rachis in the wild type is indicated by an arrow (G). All insets are magnified two-fold relative to the main images (G and H). Insets in G show examples of pachytene, diplotene, anddiakinesis nuclei. Insets in H show pachytene-stage nuclei (1), abnormal nuclei immediately after exit from pachytene (2), and more proximal nuclei (3). Abnormal nuclei have condensed (arrowheads) or decondensed chromosomes. Bar, 20 μm.We examined mutants and adults and noted that germ cells in the proximal arms of these animals contain a rough-appearing cytoplasm similar to the cytoplasm that characterizes wild-type oocytes and early embryos; however, the oocytes appeared small and were arranged in a disorganized fashion throughout the proximal arm (Figure 1, C and E; Figure S2). We examined the expression of MSP, a sperm-specific protein important for sperm motility and meiotic maturation signaling (Italiano ; Miller ; Kosinski ), andRME-2, an oocyte-specific yolk receptor protein (Grant and Hirsh 1999), and confirmed that gonads contain both sperm and small disorganized oocytes (Figure 1, A and B). These observations suggest that animals are sterile because they make small, abnormal oocytes. Small, disorganized oocytes expressing OMA-1::GFP are also observed in sterile animals (Figure 1, C–F). Interestingly, both experiments suggest that oocytes become progressively abnormal as they age and move proximally toward the spermatheca. Oocyte marker expression (e.g., RME-2 andOMA-1::GFP) is reduced or absent in the oldest oocytes, and nuclei in this region are often polyploid (Figure 1, B, F, and H). Consistent with the idea that these cells lose the oocyte fate, we observed that a minority of the most proximal cells expressed unc-119p::gfp, a neuronal marker (Maduro and Pilgrim 1995). On the first 2 days of adulthood, 65 of 96 gonad arms of post-dauer animals contained unc-119p::gfp-positive cells adjacent to the spermatheca (average 2.2, range 0–14). The number of cells expressing unc-119p::gfp was sensitive to growth conditions (i.e., growth medium and bacterial food source) (D. Greenstein, unpublished results and as described below).To further confirm that germ cells are oogenic, we examined whether germ cells are able to undergo programmed cell death (apoptosis). Germline programmed cell death is restricted to oogenic germ lines (Gumienny ) and occurs in late pachytene, just before the gonad turns ventrally and oocytes begin to grow and transition from pachytene into diplotene (Figure 2, A and B). germ lines usually contain several dying cells; however, they are often observed proximally and are larger than those in the wild type (Figure 2, C–E). These observations suggest that germ cell death may be abnormal and not restricted to late pachytene. However, because most germ cell death requires (Figure 2E), which encodes the caspase required for programmed germ cell death (Gumienny ), these results are also consistent with the interpretation that germ cells can undergo programmed cell death and are oogenic.
Figure 2
Abnormal germ cells in lin-41 null mutants retain the capacity to undergo programmed cell death and are thus oogenic. (A–D) Acridine orange (AO) accumulates in lin-41(n2914) oocytes (arrowheads in C and D) that are much larger than the late-pachytene-stage cells that undergo programmed cell death in wild type (arrowhead in A and B). (E) Average number of acridine-orange-stained cells (AO+) in animals of the indicated genotypes with the range of observed values in brackets. Bar, 20 μm.
Abnormal germ cells in lin-41 null mutants retain the capacity to undergo programmed cell death and are thus oogenic. (A–D) Acridine orange (AO) accumulates in lin-41(n2914) oocytes (arrowheads in C and D) that are much larger than the late-pachytene-stage cells that undergo programmed cell death in wild type (arrowhead in A and B). (E) Average number of acridine-orange-stained cells (AO+) in animals of the indicated genotypes with the range of observed values in brackets. Bar, 20 μm.In addition to being small and disorganized, oocytes have highly abnormal nuclei, even in the early stages of oogenesis (Figure 1H, inset 2). germ cell nuclei appear normal until late pachytene, but thereafter contain highly condensed or completely decondensed chromosomes (Figure 1H) that generally do not resemble diplotene or diakinesis-stage chromosomes. Wild-type oocytes make the transition from pachytene to diplotene and diakinesis in the context of oocyte growth and cellularization (Figure 1G). When we examined the rachis or cytoplasmic core of the syncytial gonad, a structure essential for normal oocyte growth (Wolke ), we found that it narrows and appears to terminate prematurely in mutants (Figure 1H, n = 26). Interestingly, oocyte nuclei exit pachytene at approximately the same time, or shortly after, the apparent end of the rachis. Together, these observations suggest that oocytes prematurely cellularize and exit meiotic prophase during late pachytene or during the pachytene-to-diplotene transition.
LIN-41 is expressed and functions in the oogenic germ line independently of the heterochronic gene pathway
LIN-41-specific antibodies were generated to examine LIN-41 expression and localization in the germ line (Figure 3; Figure S3; Figure S4). LIN-41 is strongly expressed in adult hermaphrodite germ cells beginning in mid-pachytene (Figure 3A). LIN-41 protein levels rise dramatically at this time, increasing several-fold over a distance corresponding to just a few cell diameters (Figure 3B). We explored the timing of this rise and found that it consistently occurs just before the peak of MPK-1 MAPK activation in mid-pachytene (Figure 3, H–K, n = 14), which may promote the progression of oogenic germ cells from early to late pachytene (Lee ). LIN-41 is also abundantly expressed in diplotene- anddiakinesis-stage oocytes, but is generally reduced in abundance in the –1 oocyte as it undergoes meiotic maturation (14/17 oocytes identified), suggesting that LIN-41 may be eliminated at this time. Consistent with this interpretation, an N-terminal GFP::LIN-41 fusion protein, generated by CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing (Dickinson ; Friedland ; Tzur ) of the endogenous locus, is expressed in oocytes, disappears during meiotic maturation, and is absent from early embryos (Figure 4). A similar observation was made for a nonrescuing C-terminal LIN-41::GFP fusion protein (Figure S5). Most LIN-41 is diffusely cytoplasmic, with a small amount of punctate LIN-41 that is most evident during pachytene (Figure 3, C and H). As expected, no strong staining is apparent in hermaphrodite germ lines (Figure 3D; Figure S3C). LIN-41 was also not detected in the germ lines of males or mid-L4 stage larvae (Figure 3, E and G; Figure S3, D and F), both of which have late-pachytene-stage germ cells undergoing spermatogenesis (Ellis and Schedl 2007; Ellis and Stanfield 2014), suggesting that pachytene-stage LIN-41 expression is restricted to germ cells committed to oogenesis. The primary, and possibly exclusive, site of LIN-41 expression in adults appears to be the oogenic germ line. LIN-41 is detectable by western blot in oogenic adult hermaphrodites and females, but is not detected in wild-type and spermatogenic adult males or sterile ts) adults (Figure 3L; Figure S4), which lack most germ cells (Austin and Kimble 1987). LIN-41 was not detected in (Figure 2L; Figure S4) or adults by Western blot (C. Spike, unpublished results), again confirming the specificity of the LIN-41 antibodies. We conclude that LIN-41 expression in the C. elegans germ line is strongly associated, both developmentally and spatially, with the oogenic fate.
Figure 3
LIN-41 is expressed during oogenesis. (A and B) Immunofluorescence staining of wild-type hermaphrodites shows that LIN-41 expression (green) begins in mid-pachytene and continues throughout oogenesis. Expression begins abruptly and is reduced in oocytes undergoing meiotic maturation (arrowhead). The signal in the area enclosed by the rectangle is quantitated in B. (C–G) LIN-41 expression in late pachytene in an adult hermaphrodite (C), lin-41(n2914) post-dauer hermaphrodite (D), adult male (E), young adult hermaphrodite (F), and mid-L4-stage hermaphrodite (G); images in (C–E) and (F and G) are from the same experiments respectively, and have identical exposure times. Figure S3 shows the entire germ line of each genotype and stage. (H–K) LIN-41 expression begins just before MPK-1 MAP kinase activation (red) peaks in pachytene. Bar, 20 μm (A) and 10 μm (C–K). (L) Western blots examining LIN-41 expression in adult worms of the indicated genotypes; 40–50 worms were used in each lane. The slight mobility shift of LIN-41 in let-7(ts) was not reproducible. Figure S4 contains uncropped images of both LIN-41 blots and shows the positions of size standards.
Figure 4
GFP::LIN-41 begins to be eliminated from oocytes during meiotic maturation. (A–E) A functional GFP::LIN-41 fusion protein was generated by CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing of the lin-41 locus and used to examine the localization of the protein in otherwise wild-type hermaphrodites (A) after RNAi of cdk-1 (B) or wee-1.3 (C) in mbk-2(pk1427) mutants (D) that lack the function of the MBK-2 minibrain-related DYRK-family kinase (Pellettieri ) or in emb-30(tn377ts) mutants at 25° (E) that contain a mutation in the APC4 subunit of the anaphase-promoting complex (Furuta ). The elimination of GFP::LIN-41 depends on CDK-1 (B). A mildly affected wee-1.3(RNAi) gonad arm shows the elimination of GFP::LIN-41 from the –1 to –4 oocytes, with the GFP signal intensity appearing lower in the –5 oocyte (C). DIC microscopy showed that all oocytes in the gonad arm had intact nuclear envelopes. The arrowhead indicates an oocyte undergoing meiotic maturation that contains a reduced level of GFP::LIN-41 (A). Sp, spermatheca; E, first embryo in the uterus. Bar, 20 μm. Genotypes also included itIs37[pie-1p::mCherry::H2B::pie-1 3′UTR, unc-119(+)] (B and C) and unc-24(e1172) (D).
LIN-41 is expressed during oogenesis. (A and B) Immunofluorescence staining of wild-type hermaphrodites shows that LIN-41 expression (green) begins in mid-pachytene and continues throughout oogenesis. Expression begins abruptly and is reduced in oocytes undergoing meiotic maturation (arrowhead). The signal in the area enclosed by the rectangle is quantitated in B. (C–G) LIN-41 expression in late pachytene in an adult hermaphrodite (C), lin-41(n2914) post-dauer hermaphrodite (D), adult male (E), young adult hermaphrodite (F), and mid-L4-stage hermaphrodite (G); images in (C–E) and (F and G) are from the same experiments respectively, and have identical exposure times. Figure S3 shows the entire germ line of each genotype and stage. (H–K) LIN-41 expression begins just before MPK-1 MAP kinase activation (red) peaks in pachytene. Bar, 20 μm (A) and 10 μm (C–K). (L) Western blots examining LIN-41 expression in adult worms of the indicated genotypes; 40–50 worms were used in each lane. The slight mobility shift of LIN-41 in let-7(ts) was not reproducible. Figure S4 contains uncropped images of both LIN-41 blots and shows the positions of size standards.GFP::LIN-41 begins to be eliminated from oocytes during meiotic maturation. (A–E) A functional GFP::LIN-41 fusion protein was generated by CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing of the lin-41 locus and used to examine the localization of the protein in otherwise wild-type hermaphrodites (A) after RNAi of cdk-1 (B) or wee-1.3 (C) in mbk-2(pk1427) mutants (D) that lack the function of the MBK-2 minibrain-related DYRK-family kinase (Pellettieri ) or in emb-30(tn377ts) mutants at 25° (E) that contain a mutation in the APC4 subunit of the anaphase-promoting complex (Furuta ). The elimination of GFP::LIN-41 depends on CDK-1 (B). A mildly affected wee-1.3(RNAi) gonad arm shows the elimination of GFP::LIN-41 from the –1 to –4 oocytes, with the GFP signal intensity appearing lower in the –5 oocyte (C). DIC microscopy showed that all oocytes in the gonad arm had intact nuclear envelopes. The arrowhead indicates an oocyte undergoing meiotic maturation that contains a reduced level of GFP::LIN-41 (A). Sp, spermatheca; E, first embryo in the uterus. Bar, 20 μm. Genotypes also included itIs37[pie-1p::mCherry::H2B::pie-1 3′UTR, unc-119(+)] (B and C) andunc-24(e1172) (D).To determine if functions in the germ line or somatic gonad to exert its role in oocyte development, we performed on mutant worms, which are sensitive to RNAi in germ cells, but resistant to RNAi in many somatic cells (Sijen ; Kumsta and Hansen 2012). Consistent with the interpretation that functions in the germ line for fertility, ; adults are sterile with small, disorganized oocytes (Figure S2, C and D), and they display the meiotic progression defect described above for mutant oocytes, but lack somatic phenotypes. These phenotypes include the short and fat (Dumpy) body phenotype, which is characteristic of most loss-of-function mutants (Slack ) and is phenocopied by in wild-type hermaphrodites (C. Spike, unpublished results).and other members of the heterochronic gene pathway regulate the timing of cell division and terminal differentiation of lateral hypodermal seam cells during larval development (Reinhart ; Slack ; reviewed by Rougvie and Moss 2013). In this pathway, represses the precocious accumulation of LIN-29 protein, and is epistatic to a fertile allele of with respect to seam cell development (Slack ). However, is not epistatic to the sterile allele with respect to fertility (Figure S2, A and B), indicating that LIN-29 is not a key target of repression in the adult germ line. Likewise, the microRNA is upstream of in the heterochronic pathway and represses LIN-41 translation in hypodermal cells through sequences in the 3′ UTR, a relationship that is conserved in other systems (Reinhart ; Worringer ; reviewed by Ecsedi and Grosshans 2013). We examined LIN-41 protein accumulation in ts) adults raised at the restrictive temperature, but did not see an increase in LIN-41 protein accumulation in whole animals by western blot or in the adult germ line by immunofluorescence (Figure 3L; C. Spike, unpublished data). Although the mature microRNA is present in adults, it may be confined to somatic cells (Lau ) and may not regulate LIN-41 protein accumulation in the germ line. We conclude that LIN-41 is expressed and functions in the oogenic germ line in a manner that is independent of the heterochronic gene pathway.
lin-41 is not required for spermatogenesis
The absence of LIN-41 from spermatogenic germ cells (Figure 3, E, G, and L) and the presence of morphologically normal sperm in adult hermaphrodites (Slack ) (Figure 1B) suggests that spermatogenesis is likely normal in mutants. We therefore examined males raised under normal growth conditions; these animals are very small as adults, approximately the size of normal L3-stage males, and have abnormal tails (Figure 5, A and B). Similar male tail abnormalities were previously described for the hypomorphic allele (Del Rio-Albrechtsen ). Despite these somatic abnormalities, the adult male germ line appears to be fully developed and produces abundant spermatids (Figure 5A). males recovered from starved plates with many dauers also have normal-appearing germ lines (Figure 5D) and are suppressed for the small body size and tail defects (Figure 5C). We tested whether post-dauer animals produce viable sperm using a mating test; 3 of 30 post-dauer males sired cross-progeny (Figure 5E). Thus, although post-dauer males have a low mating efficiency, likely due to incomplete suppression of male somatic defects (C. Spike, unpublished results), they produce fertilization-competent sperm.
Figure 5
Spermatogenesis appears normal in lin-41 males. (A and B) lin-41(n2914) males produce spermatids (sp), but have abnormal tails (B, arrowhead). These animals are small and sickly; the arrow points to intestinal material that has leaked through the rectum. (C and D) lin-41(n2914) post-dauer males appear more normal with respect to tail morphology (C, arrowhead) and do not exhibit defects in meiotic progression during spermatogenesis (D). Insets in D are magnified two-fold relative to the main image and show pachytene (1) and metaphase I images (2); nuclei with male-specific karyosome (arrowhead) and spermatid (sp) morphologies are indicated. Images in D were taken using an apotome adaptor. (E) lin-41(n2914); fog-2 post-dauer males (P0s) are able to sire progeny (F1s) when mated to unc-64 hermaphrodites. Male parents and progeny were genotyped by PCR. lin-41(n2914) is a small deletion that results in a smaller PCR product (arrow) than lin-41(+). non-Unc F1 hermaphrodites also segregated Lin-41 animals among their progeny. The fog-2(oz40) marker was used for convenience; fog-2 is dispensable for male development (Schedl and Kimble 1988). Bar, 20 μm (A–D).
Spermatogenesis appears normal in lin-41 males. (A and B) lin-41(n2914) males produce spermatids (sp), but have abnormal tails (B, arrowhead). These animals are small and sickly; the arrow points to intestinal material that has leaked through the rectum. (C and D) lin-41(n2914) post-dauer males appear more normal with respect to tail morphology (C, arrowhead) and do not exhibit defects in meiotic progression during spermatogenesis (D). Insets in D are magnified two-fold relative to the main image and show pachytene (1) and metaphase I images (2); nuclei with male-specific karyosome (arrowhead) and spermatid (sp) morphologies are indicated. Images in D were taken using an apotome adaptor. (E) lin-41(n2914); fog-2 post-dauer males (P0s) are able to sire progeny (F1s) when mated to unc-64hermaphrodites. Male parents and progeny were genotyped by PCR. lin-41(n2914) is a small deletion that results in a smaller PCR product (arrow) than lin-41(+). non-Unc F1 hermaphrodites also segregated Lin-41 animals among their progeny. The fog-2(oz40) marker was used for convenience; fog-2 is dispensable for male development (Schedl and Kimble 1988). Bar, 20 μm (A–D).
LIN-41 NHL-repeat domain is critical for fertility and oocyte quality
Studies focused on the heterochronic pathway demonstrated that is a dominant suppressor of ts) lethality and identified two sterile alleles of , including , an early out-of-frame deletion, and , a DNA rearrangement allele that is no longer extant (Slack ). To identify additional sterile alleles of , we screened for new dominant ts) suppressors and identified alleles based on chromosomal linkage and complementation tests with . Sequence changes within the gene were identified for 25 of 29 alleles, and most of these alleles cause sterility (Figure 6). Importantly, 8 of the sterile alleles are missense mutations in conserved residues within the LIN-41 NHL-repeat domain (, , , , , , ts). ts) is described in more detail below. One of the three viable alleles (), for which we isolated and identified a molecular lesion, has a missense mutation in the NHL-repeat domain (Figure 6), similar to the viable alleles described by Slack who first identified this region as critical for LIN-41 function. Based on the new sterile alleles, we conclude that the LIN-41 NHL-repeat domain is critical for fertility as well as seam cell development. This domain is likely to be a sequence-specific RNA-binding domain important for regulating mRNA translation (Loedige , 2014). Indeed, LIN-41 appears to regulate translation in C. elegans oocytes: it copurifies with OMA-1, a known translational regulator, and represses the translation of several targets of and , as we show in the accompanying article in this issue (Spike ).
Figure 6
New lin-41 alleles indicate that the NHL-repeat domain is critical for fertility. (A) A drawing depicting the exon–intron structure of lin-41 (C12C8.3a in WormBase WS242). Deletions predicted to cause frameshifts and point mutations that disrupt splice sites are illustrated above the lin-41 gene. (B) A drawing depicting the LIN-41 protein, predicted domains, and the region recognized by anti-LIN-41 antibodies. Premature stop codons (*) and amino acid substitutions that alter the size or composition of the LIN-41 protein are shown. We identified many new alleles that cause sterility (black text), including amino acid substitutions in the C-terminal NHL-repeat domain (region with black boxes), and a few alleles that are fertile or viable (white text, shaded background). Intragenic suppressor mutations located in the NHL-repeat domain (tn1515, tn1516) restore fertility more effectively than those in the B-box zinc finger (tn1536, tn1539). lin-41(n2914) was previously described (Slack ). lin-41(ve67) was identified and provided by J. Tennessen and A. Rougvie. We also identified three viable and fertile alleles (tn1485, tn1493, and tn1503) and one sterile allele (tn1494) for which we did not find a molecular lesion in exons, introns, or 3′ UTR sequences (C. Eichten, C. Spike, and D. Greenstein, unpublished results).
New lin-41 alleles indicate that the NHL-repeat domain is critical for fertility. (A) A drawing depicting the exon–intron structure of lin-41 (C12C8.3a in WormBase WS242). Deletions predicted to cause frameshifts and point mutations that disrupt splice sites are illustrated above the lin-41 gene. (B) A drawing depicting the LIN-41 protein, predicted domains, and the region recognized by anti-LIN-41 antibodies. Premature stop codons (*) and amino acid substitutions that alter the size or composition of the LIN-41 protein are shown. We identified many new alleles that cause sterility (black text), including amino acid substitutions in the C-terminal NHL-repeat domain (region with black boxes), and a few alleles that are fertile or viable (white text, shaded background). Intragenic suppressor mutations located in the NHL-repeat domain (tn1515, tn1516) restore fertility more effectively than those in the B-box zinc finger (tn1536, tn1539). lin-41(n2914) was previously described (Slack ). lin-41(ve67) was identified and provided by J. Tennessen and A. Rougvie. We also identified three viable and fertile alleles (tn1485, tn1493, and tn1503) and one sterile allele (tn1494) for which we did not find a molecular lesion in exons, introns, or 3′ UTR sequences (C. Eichten, C. Spike, and D. Greenstein, unpublished results).Our screen permitted the isolation of temperature-sensitive alleles, and we identified one allele with temperature-sensitive sterility. ts) animals are 100% fertile at 15° but almost completely sterile at 25° (Table 1). At the intermediate temperature of 22°, ts) animals are mostly fertile but display reduced fecundity andembryonic viability, resulting in dramatically reduced brood sizes. These defects are likely caused by poor-quality oocytes. ts) oocytes at 22° are often small and sometimes disorganized, but can make a relatively normal transition from pachytene into diakinesis, unlike oocytes (compare Figure 7, D–I; Figure 8, I–L; and Figure S3G). Furthermore, the progeny of ts) XX hermaphrodites raised at 22° are more frequently XO males, suggesting that there are elevated levels of chromosome nondisjunction during oocyte meiosis at this temperature (Table 1). Male frequency is ∼10- to 20-fold higher than in the wild type (Table 1) (Hodgkin ; Rose and Baillie 1979). Increased numbers of males are also observed among the progeny of alleles isolated as intragenic suppressors of ts) sterility at 25° (Table 1). Males are most evident among the progeny of two relatively weak suppressors of ts with amino acid changes in the first B-box zinc-finger domain (ts and ts), but are also notable among the progeny of two stronger suppressors with amino acid changes in the NHL-repeat domain (ts and ts). It is presently unknown how these second-site mutations in the gene suppress the temperature-sensitive sterility of ts. Temperature-sensitive alleles can cause protein destabilization and degradation at restrictive temperatures, but ts) does not reduce LIN-41 protein accumulation in adult hermaphrodites raised at 25° (Figure 3L). Furthermore, LIN-41 expression and localization is relatively normal in ts) germ lines at both 22° and 25°, although there appears to be a gradual, rather than dramatic, increase in LIN-41 protein levels during pachytene at both temperatures (Figure S3G; C. Spike, unpublished results). It is possible, therefore, that ts and its intragenic suppressor mutations identify LIN-41 residues with critical roles in regulating LIN-41 RNA binding or mRNA translation activities. Consistent with this possibility, the ts) mutation in the NHL-repeat domain derepresses translation of several 3′ UTR reporter constructs, including the OMA mRNA targets, and (Spike ).
Table 1
Reduction of lin-41 function reduces oocyte quality and increases meiotic chromosome nondisjunction
Genotype
Temperature
% Fertilea
Brood sizeb
% Male
WTc
25°
100 (n = 258)
201.5 ± 61.8 (n = 30)
0.1 (n = 6044)
lin-41(tn1487 ts)
15°
100 (n = 224)
103.8 ± 37.8d (n = 64)
0.3 (n = 6642)
lin-41(tn1487 ts)
22°
83.7 (n = 86)
3.9 ± 3.8e (n = 86)
2.4 (n = 338)
lin-41(tn1487 ts)c
25°
0.3 (n = 310)
0 ± 0.1 (n = 168)
ND
lin-41(tn1487 tstn1515)c
25°
98.1 (n = 472)
66 ± 36 (n = 31)
1.6 (n = 435)
lin-41(tn1487 tstn1516)c
25°
99.7 (n = 324)
108 ± 36 (n = 25)
2.5 (n = 1586)
lin-41(tn1487 tstn1536)c
25°
33.9 (n = 230)
5.4 ± 6.3f (n = 83)
5.1 (n = 455)
lin-41(tn1487 tstn1539)c
25°
86.2 (n = 232)
14.0 ± 10.9g (n = 82)
5.7 (n = 1152)
Fertile animals produced at least one viable offspring.
Number of progeny hatching per adult.
Newly fertilized embryos were collected at 15° and shifted to 25°. The fertility, brood size, incidence of male progeny, and embryonic lethality were measured by examination of the F1 progeny.
lin-41(tn1487 ts) adults lay 139.7 eggs per adult (n = 32), with 75.9% hatching at 15°.
lin-41(tn1487 ts) adults lay 9.8 eggs per adult (n = 29), with 39.1% hatching at 22°.
lin-41(tn1487 tstn1536) adults lay 29.1 eggs per adult (n = 39), with 20.1% hatching at 25°.
lin-41(tn1487 tstn1539) adults lay 57.3 eggs per adult (n = 40), with 27.3% hatching at 25°.
Figure 7
Distinct patterns of phospho-histone H3 accumulation in the wild-type and lin-41 mutants. (A–C) In wild-type animals, antibodies detecting phosphorylated histone H3 (pH3) strongly stain some of the nuclei in the distal mitotic region and also stain the nuclei of the most proximal oocytes (–1 and –2), but do not stain pachytene or diplotene (dp) nuclei (A). The overlap of pH3 (green) with a nuclear DNA stain (DAPI, magenta) is shown at higher magnification in the mitotic region (B) and in the last few oocytes (C). (D–I) In lin-41(n2914) animals, many oocyte nuclei accumulate pH3, including nuclei near the loop (D, curved arrow; the earliest nucleus accumulating pH3 on chromosomes is indicated by a short arrow). The first pH3-positive chromosomes are found just after lin-41(n2914) germ cells exit from pachytene (E and F). Arrowheads in E indicate nuclei with decondensed chromosomes, which are located proximal to the first pH3-positive nuclei. Nuclei in boxes are magnified two-fold in G–I and include a typical pachytene-stage nucleus with no pH3 accumulation (G), a later pachytene-stage nucleus with faint nuclear pH3 (H), and condensed pH3-positive chromatin immediately after pachytene (I). Bar, 20 μm (A); 10 μm (B–F); and 5 μm (G–I).
Figure 8
lin-41 germ cells enter M phase prematurely. (A and B) Staining with anti-LMN-1 (A, green) reveals a lin-41(tn1505) oocyte that has undergone nuclear envelope breakdown (short arrow) immediately after pachytene. The oocyte has condensed pH3-positive (A, red) chromosomes (B) and is in M phase. Abnormal aggregates of LMN-1 that are not associated with the nuclear envelope are evident proximally (A, arrowheads). (C–E) Microtubules (C and E, red) form spindles immediately after pachytene in lin-41(n2914). Condensed pH3-positive (C and E, green) chromosomes (D and E) are in metaphase-like (C, short arrow) and late-anaphase-like (E) configurations. (F and G) Centrioles (GFP::SAS-6, green) are present after lin-41(RNAi) in late-pachytene-stage nuclei (F) and at the center of spindle poles (tubulin, red) immediately after pachytene (G). (H) Spindle (tubulin, red) in a lin-41(n2914) RME-2-expressing oocyte (green); the arrowhead indicates a chromosome that has not aligned with the others. (I–L) A mildly affected lin-41(tn1487ts) germ line at 25°; several pH3-positive (I, red) oocyte nuclei are in diakinesis (arrowheads) and one has undergone NEBD (short arrow) and is in M phase. Insets are shown in greater detail in K and L. Chromosomes in the M-phase oocyte (K) have congressed, but otherwise resemble the separated bivalents typical of diakinesis-stage oocytes (L, arrowhead). Images in A–E, K, and L were taken using an apotome adaptor. Bars, 5 μm (E–H, K, and L) and 10 μm (A–D, I, and J).
Fertile animals produced at least one viable offspring.Number of progeny hatching per adult.Newly fertilized embryos were collected at 15° and shifted to 25°. The fertility, brood size, incidence of male progeny, andembryonic lethality were measured by examination of the F1 progeny.lin-41(tn1487 ts) adults lay 139.7 eggs per adult (n = 32), with 75.9% hatching at 15°.lin-41(tn1487 ts) adults lay 9.8 eggs per adult (n = 29), with 39.1% hatching at 22°.lin-41(tn1487 tstn1536) adults lay 29.1 eggs per adult (n = 39), with 20.1% hatching at 25°.lin-41(tn1487 tstn1539) adults lay 57.3 eggs per adult (n = 40), with 27.3% hatching at 25°.Distinct patterns of phospho-histone H3 accumulation in the wild-type andlin-41 mutants. (A–C) In wild-type animals, antibodies detecting phosphorylated histone H3 (pH3) strongly stain some of the nuclei in the distal mitotic region and also stain the nuclei of the most proximal oocytes (–1 and –2), but do not stain pachytene or diplotene (dp) nuclei (A). The overlap of pH3 (green) with a nuclear DNA stain (DAPI, magenta) is shown at higher magnification in the mitotic region (B) and in the last few oocytes (C). (D–I) In lin-41(n2914) animals, many oocyte nuclei accumulate pH3, including nuclei near the loop (D, curved arrow; the earliest nucleus accumulating pH3 on chromosomes is indicated by a short arrow). The first pH3-positive chromosomes are found just after lin-41(n2914) germ cells exit from pachytene (E and F). Arrowheads in E indicate nuclei with decondensed chromosomes, which are located proximal to the first pH3-positive nuclei. Nuclei in boxes are magnified two-fold in G–I and include a typical pachytene-stage nucleus with no pH3 accumulation (G), a later pachytene-stage nucleus with faint nuclear pH3 (H), and condensed pH3-positive chromatin immediately after pachytene (I). Bar, 20 μm (A); 10 μm (B–F); and 5 μm (G–I).lin-41 germ cells enter M phase prematurely. (A and B) Staining with anti-LMN-1 (A, green) reveals a lin-41(tn1505) oocyte that has undergone nuclear envelope breakdown (short arrow) immediately after pachytene. The oocyte has condensed pH3-positive (A, red) chromosomes (B) and is in M phase. Abnormal aggregates of LMN-1 that are not associated with the nuclear envelope are evident proximally (A, arrowheads). (C–E) Microtubules (C and E, red) form spindles immediately after pachytene in lin-41(n2914). Condensed pH3-positive (C and E, green) chromosomes (D and E) are in metaphase-like (C, short arrow) and late-anaphase-like (E) configurations. (F and G) Centrioles (GFP::SAS-6, green) are present after lin-41(RNAi) in late-pachytene-stage nuclei (F) and at the center of spindle poles (tubulin, red) immediately after pachytene (G). (H) Spindle (tubulin, red) in a lin-41(n2914) RME-2-expressing oocyte (green); the arrowhead indicates a chromosome that has not aligned with the others. (I–L) A mildly affected lin-41(tn1487ts) germ line at 25°; several pH3-positive (I, red) oocyte nuclei are in diakinesis (arrowheads) and one has undergone NEBD (short arrow) and is in M phase. Insets are shown in greater detail in K and L. Chromosomes in the M-phase oocyte (K) have congressed, but otherwise resemble the separated bivalents typical of diakinesis-stage oocytes (L, arrowhead). Images in A–E, K, and L were taken using an apotome adaptor. Bars, 5 μm (E–H, K, and L) and 10 μm (A–D, I, and J).
lin-41 prevents oocytes from entering M phase
Wild-type C. elegans oocytes exit meiotic prophase just prior to ovulation and fertilization at the proximal end of the germ line. We examined events associated with exit from meiotic prophase and entry into meiotic M phase in mutant oocytes and found that many of these events occur prematurely (Figure 7; Figure 8; Figure S6). One of these events is the phosphorylation of histone H3 (Ser10), which occurs just prior to and during M-phase entry (Hsu ). In wild-type hermaphrodites, chromosome-associated phosphorylated histone H3 (pH3) is strongly detected in nuclei in the distal mitotic region (proliferation zone) and in the most developed diakinesis-stage oocytes; there is no pH3 accumulation at earlier stages of oogenesis (Figure 7, A–C). By contrast, oocytes prematurely accumulate phosphorylated histone H3 in early oogenesis. Faint pH3 accumulation is often observed in the last few pachytene-stage nuclei, with bright chromosome-associated pH3 appearing on condensed chromosomes immediately after pachytene (Figure 7, E–I). However, only some oocyte nuclei accumulate pH3; it is typically absent from nuclei with decondensed chromosomes (Figure 7, D–F). This pattern suggests that oocytes enter M phase immediately after pachytene and likely cycle out of and back into M phase, perhaps multiple times.Nuclear envelope breakdown (NEBD) is one of the defining characteristics of M-phase entry. In wild-type animals, this event occurs exclusively in the most developed oocyte a few minutes before ovulation (McCarter ). We monitored the integrity of the nuclear envelope in oocytes using antibodies that recognize the nuclear lamina (Liu ) and observed that mutant oocytes undergo NEBD immediately after pachytene (Figure 8, A and B; Figure S6). We consider oocytes with condensed, pH3-positive chromosomes that have undergone NEBD to be in M phase. Such oocytes are observed immediately after pachytene in a majority of gonads [ and ] and in the gonads of some ts) animals raised at 25° (Table 2). Premature M-phase entry is also observed after in both the wild-type and mutants (C. Spike, unpublished results).
Table 2
Oocytes prematurely enter M phase in lin-41 mutants
Genotype
Temperature
No. of proximal M-phase nucleia
% Fixed gonads with M-phase nucleia
Immediately after pachytene (%)
Proximally (%)
lin-41(n2914)
20°
14.2 ± 9.7 (n = 13)
63 (n = 16)
100 (n = 16)
lin-41(tn1505)
20°
ND
90 (n = 21)
100 (n = 21)
lin-41(tn1487 ts)b
25°c
1.5 ± 1.4 (n = 20)
25 (n = 20)
85 (n = 20)
lin-41(tn1487 ts)b
22°c
1.2 ± 1.7 (n = 22)
0 (n = 22)
54 (n = 22)
lin-41(tn1487 ts)b
15°
0.2 ± 0.4 (n = 14)
0 (n = 14)
21 (n = 14)
lin-41(tn1487 ts)b
22°d
0.6 ± 0.6 (n = 24)
0 (n = 24)
54 (n = 24)
lin-41(tn1487 ts); oma-1(zu405te33); oma-2(te51)b
22°d
0 ± 0 (n = 27)
0 (n = 27)
0 (n = 27)
lin-41(tn1487 ts); fog-2(oz40)e
22°f
0.5 ± 0.8 (n = 28)
0 (n = 28)
32 (n = 28)
Nuclei that have undergone NEBD and are positive for phospho-histone H3 (Ser10).
lin-41(tn1487 ts) homozygous parent.
Animals were upshifted from 15° as embryos.
Animals were upshifted from 15° as L4 larvae.
lin-41(tn1487 ts) heterozygous parent.
Animals were upshifted from 15° as L2–L4 larvae.
Nuclei that have undergone NEBD and are positive for phospho-histone H3 (Ser10).lin-41(tn1487 ts) homozygous parent.Animals were upshifted from 15° as embryos.Animals were upshifted from 15° as L4 larvae.lin-41(tn1487 ts) heterozygous parent.Animals were upshifted from 15° as L2–L4 larvae.
M-phase entry of lin-41 mutant oocytes immediately after pachytene requires cdk-1, as does expression of the unc-119p::gfp reporter:
We confirmed that mutant oocytes prematurely enter M phase by disrupting conserved cell-cycle genes. Entry into M phase requires the cyclin-dependent kinase CDC2/CDK-1 (Boxem ; Chase ; Burrows ), and prevents the premature accumulation of pH3 in mutant oocytes, as well as chromosome condensation and NEBD (Figure 9, C, D, and K). Because is required for postembryonic cell divisions, including those of germline stem cells (Boxem ), the treatment must be initiated late in development—in the L4 larval stage. The few proximal pH3-positive nuclei observed in ; germ lines (Figure 9K) were located near the spermatheca, and they likely correspond to the earliest oocytes formed after the initiation of the RNAi treatment.
Figure 9
CDK-1 promotes M-phase entry in lin-41 oocytes. (A and B) lin-41 nuclei enter M phase (arrowheads) immediately after pachytene (dashed line); this does not occur in lin-41; cdk-1(RNAi) animals (C and D). Instead, lin-41; cdk-1(RNAi) oocyte nuclei enlarge, but remain in pachytene (arrowhead) until the DNA completely decondenses (arrow). Insets in C and D show an oocyte in M phase in a lin-41 animal treated with control RNAi; this treatment did not suppress the lin-41 phenotype (see K in this figure and Figure S7C). (E and F) Oocytes exit from pachytene and arrest with condensed pH3-positive (F) chromosomes (E) in lin-41; emb-30(ts) animals upshifted to 25°. Although cdk-1 is essential, oma-1 and oma-2, which redundantly promote oocyte meiotic maturation, are not needed for lin-41 oocyte nuclei to enter M phase after pachytene (G and H), and neither is the presence of sperm required (I and J). DNA (A, C, E, G, and I) and pH3 accumulation (B, D, F, H, and J) are shown; the nuclear lamina was also examined to identify oocytes in M phase (not shown). Bar, 20 μm. (K) Post-dauer L4-stage hermaphrodites were fed control or cdk-1 dsRNA-expressing bacteria for 2 days at 22°, and the number of post-pachytene nuclei positive for phospho-histone H3 were counted. Wild-type animals treated with cdk-1(RNAi) made oocytes that failed to accumulate pH3, as previously described (Boxem ).
CDK-1 promotes M-phase entry in lin-41 oocytes. (A and B) lin-41 nuclei enter M phase (arrowheads) immediately after pachytene (dashed line); this does not occur in lin-41; cdk-1(RNAi) animals (C and D). Instead, lin-41; cdk-1(RNAi) oocyte nuclei enlarge, but remain in pachytene (arrowhead) until the DNA completely decondenses (arrow). Insets in C and D show an oocyte in M phase in a lin-41 animal treated with control RNAi; this treatment did not suppress the lin-41 phenotype (see K in this figure and Figure S7C). (E and F) Oocytes exit from pachytene andarrest with condensed pH3-positive (F) chromosomes (E) in lin-41; emb-30(ts) animals upshifted to 25°. Although cdk-1 is essential, oma-1 and oma-2, which redundantly promote oocyte meiotic maturation, are not needed for lin-41 oocyte nuclei to enter M phase after pachytene (G and H), and neither is the presence of sperm required (I and J). DNA (A, C, E, G, and I) and pH3 accumulation (B, D, F, H, and J) are shown; the nuclear lamina was also examined to identify oocytes in M phase (not shown). Bar, 20 μm. (K) Post-dauer L4-stage hermaphrodites were fed control or cdk-1 dsRNA-expressing bacteria for 2 days at 22°, and the number of post-pachytene nuclei positive for phospho-histone H3 were counted. Wild-type animals treated with cdk-1(RNAi) made oocytes that failed to accumulate pH3, as previously described (Boxem ).We noted that post-pachytene germ cells in ; adults appeared to retain the oocyte fate, they possessed a rough-appearing cytoplasm and a cuboidal shape, although they were smaller than normal oocytes (Figure S7E). We therefore asked whether the capacity of proximal mutant cells to express a somatic marker (e.g., unc-119p::gfp) depends on the premature activation of . We compared post-dauer ; ::gfp] adults fed control or dsRNA-expressing bacteria. In the control RNAi treatment, all ::gfp] adult gonad arms contained unc-119p::gfp-positive cells extending to the loop region, and in many gonad arms the unc-119p::gfp-positive cells extended distally to the loop (Figure S7). By contrast, in the treatment, far fewer cells expressed unc-119p::gfp, and the expressing cells rarely extended to the loop region (Figure S7). The few cells observed to express unc-119p::gfp were located adjacent to the spermatheca (Figure S7) in a similar position to that observed for residual pH3-positive cells following (Figure 9). Based on this result, we conclude that the loss of the oocyte fate and the expression of a somatic marker are likely a secondary consequence of the premature activation of CDK-1 at the end of pachytene in null mutant oogenic cells.
Most or all developing oocytes enter M phase immediately after pachytene in lin-41 mutants:
Progression from metaphase to anaphase requires EMB-30/APC4, a subunit of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC) (Furuta ). mutant oocytes with compromised activity appear to be trapped in metaphase with condensed pH3-positive chromosomes and a disassembled nuclear lamina (Figure 9, E and F). This M-phase block reveals that most or all developing oocytes appear to enter M phase immediately after pachytene (Figure 9, E and F).
lin-41 mutant oocytes assemble spindles and attempt to segregate chromosomes immediately after pachytene:
oocyte nuclei appear to transition from pachytene into M phase without going through diplotene (Figure 1H; Figure 7, E and F; Figure 8, A–D; Figure 9, A and B). In C. elegans oocytes, centriole elimination occurs during the diplotene stage of meiotic prophase I (Mikeladze-Dvali ), resulting in meiotic spindles that are both acentriolar and anastral (Albertson and Thomson 1993). However, the spindles that form in mutant oocytes have obvious astral microtubules and therefore resemble mitotic, rather than meiotic, spindles (Figure 8, C–E), suggesting that centriole elimination has not occurred. We confirmed that mutant M-phase oocytes contain centrioles by examining the localization of the centriolar protein GFP::SAS-6 (Leidel ) after . All spindle poles identified after contained GFP::SAS-6 at their core (Figure 8G; n = 38), including 20 observed immediately after pachytene. We conclude that centriole elimination does not occur prior to M-phase entry in oocytes, consistent with the observation that oocyte nuclei do not progress through diplotene.
lin-41 mutant oocytes retain a meiotic cell fate as they prematurely enter M phase:
We considered the possibility that mutant oocytes enter mitosis after exiting meiotic prophase, similar to oogenic germ cells (Francis ,b). In mutant hermaphrodites, however, there are no cytological signs of oogenesis. Instead, the proximal gonad contains many small, undifferentiated but proliferative germ cell nuclei (Francis ; Jones ). In mutants, germ cell exit from meiotic prophase likely occurs at an early, programmed cell death-resistant stage of pachytene (Gumienny ). Because GLD-1 is abundant throughout pachytene, diminishing only as oocytes transition into diplotene (Jones ; Lee and Schedl 2001), we hypothesized that premature elimination of GLD-1 might cause, or contribute to, the mutant phenotype. GLD-1 is abundant throughout pachytene in mutants, however, diminishing only as oocytes transition from pachytene into M phase and with a similar spatial-temporal pattern as in the wild type (Figure S8, A and B).Proliferative germ cell nuclei can be distinguished from those in meiotic prophase by staining with REC-8- andHIM-3-specific antibodies, respectively, under the appropriate fixation conditions (Hansen ). We examined germ lines for mitotic and meiotic germ cells using this assay. REC-8 staining was present in distal proliferative nuclei, disappearing from germ cells as they transition to meiosis, as in the wild type (Figure S8, C and D). Meiotic nuclei were HIM-3-positive andREC-8-negative, including likely M-phase nuclei identified immediately after pachytene based on their position and morphology (Figure 10, A–E); 27 of 39 were HIM-3-positive; all 39 were REC-8-negative). When we stained germ lines with HIM-3 and lamin, we observed that nuclei having undergone NEBD within a few cell diameters of the end of pachytene were HIM-3-positive (Figure 10, F–I). Since HIM-3 is a meiosis-specific chromosome protein that localizes to the axial cores of synapsed homologous chromosomes during pachytene (Zetka ), these results indicate that mutant oogenic cells possess a meiotic fate at the time of their initial M-phase entry. Because there is no true diplotene stage in null mutants, the oocytes that enter M phase are likely derived from pachytene.
Figure 10
Analysis of axial and central components of the synaptonemal complex suggests that lin-41(n2914) oocytes enter M phase immediately after pachytene. (A–E) HIM-3 (B, green) localizes to chromosomes (A, red) both before (inset 1 and D) and immediately after (inset 2 and E) lin-41(n2914) oocytes exit from pachytene (dashed line). HIM-3-positive nuclei after pachytene exit have condensed chromosomes in metaphase-like configurations, suggesting that they are in M phase. Bar, 20 μm (A–C) or 10 μm (D and E). (F–I) A similar lin-41(n2914) oocyte (arrow) with condensed HIM-3-positive chromosomes (red and blue in the merge, respectively, and in F and H) has a disassembled nuclear lamina (G, green), confirming that it has undergone nuclear envelope breakdown. Bar, 10 μm. (J–M) SYP-2 (J, red) localizes to foci on or near chromosomes (L, blue) in young lin-41(n2914) oocytes that have undergone nuclear envelope breakdown (arrows), as evidenced by a disassembled nuclear lamina (K, green). Nearby nuclei with intact nuclear laminae (arrowheads) have an asymmetric pattern of SYP-2 localization along their chromosomes. Bar, 10 μm. (N and O) Wild-type nuclei just before diplotene (N) and a lin-41(n2914) pachytene-stage nucleus just prior to M phase (O, arrowhead). These nuclei have asymmetric SYP-2 localization patterns along their chromosomes. A nearby lin-41(n2914) oocyte in M phase (O, arrow) displays SYP-2 foci that might represent a disassembling synaptonemal complex. Bar, 5 μm (P–S) Remnants of the synaptonemal complex (arrowheads) that contain both SYP-1 (Q, red) and SYP-2 (P, green) persist after lin-41(n2914) oocytes exit from pachytene (dashed line). The location of the M-phase oocyte shown in T–W is indicated with an arrow. The nucleus of this oocyte is in a slightly different focal plane. Bar, 10 μm. (T–W) SYP-1 (U, red) and SYP-2 (T, green) appear to localize both on and near the condensed chromosomes (V, blue) of the M-phase oocyte (arrow). Two cytoplasmic remnants of the synaptonemal complex that appear to be in other cells are indicated by arrowheads. Bar, 5 μm.
Analysis of axial and central components of the synaptonemal complex suggests that lin-41(n2914) oocytes enter M phase immediately after pachytene. (A–E) HIM-3 (B, green) localizes to chromosomes (A, red) both before (inset 1 and D) and immediately after (inset 2 and E) lin-41(n2914) oocytes exit from pachytene (dashed line). HIM-3-positive nuclei after pachytene exit have condensed chromosomes in metaphase-like configurations, suggesting that they are in M phase. Bar, 20 μm (A–C) or 10 μm (D and E). (F–I) A similar lin-41(n2914) oocyte (arrow) with condensed HIM-3-positive chromosomes (red and blue in the merge, respectively, and in F and H) has a disassembled nuclear lamina (G, green), confirming that it has undergone nuclear envelope breakdown. Bar, 10 μm. (J–M) SYP-2 (J, red) localizes to foci on or near chromosomes (L, blue) in young lin-41(n2914) oocytes that have undergone nuclear envelope breakdown (arrows), as evidenced by a disassembled nuclear lamina (K, green). Nearby nuclei with intact nuclear laminae (arrowheads) have an asymmetric pattern of SYP-2 localization along their chromosomes. Bar, 10 μm. (N and O) Wild-type nuclei just before diplotene (N) and a lin-41(n2914) pachytene-stage nucleus just prior to M phase (O, arrowhead). These nuclei have asymmetric SYP-2 localization patterns along their chromosomes. A nearby lin-41(n2914) oocyte in M phase (O, arrow) displays SYP-2 foci that might represent a disassembling synaptonemal complex. Bar, 5 μm (P–S) Remnants of the synaptonemal complex (arrowheads) that contain both SYP-1 (Q, red) andSYP-2 (P, green) persist after lin-41(n2914) oocytes exit from pachytene (dashed line). The location of the M-phase oocyte shown in T–W is indicated with an arrow. The nucleus of this oocyte is in a slightly different focal plane. Bar, 10 μm. (T–W) SYP-1 (U, red) andSYP-2 (T, green) appear to localize both on and near the condensed chromosomes (V, blue) of the M-phase oocyte (arrow). Two cytoplasmic remnants of the synaptonemal complex that appear to be in other cells are indicated by arrowheads. Bar, 5 μm.To further examine the meiotic status of oogenic cells upon M-phase entry, we stained for lamin andSYP-2, which is a structural protein of the central region of the synaptonemal complex (Colaiácovo ). We observed that mutant pachytene-stage nuclei exhibit a normal SYP-2-staining pattern, suggesting that homologs are fully synapsed (Figure 10, J–W). Meiotic nuclei appear to progress to the late pachytene stage (Figure 10, N and O) when synaptonemal complex proteins begin to exhibit uneven localization along the bivalent (Nabeshima ). In M-phase nuclei undergoing or having completed NEBD, SYP-2 localizes to discrete foci that are sometimes no longer associated with chromosomes (Figure 10, J–W). SYP-1, which is also a structural protein of the central region of the synaptonemal complex (MacQueen ), colocalizes with SYP-2 at these foci in M-phase mutant oogenic nuclei, suggesting that they might represent remnants of a disassembling synaptonemal complex (Figure 10, P–W). These results suggest that homologous chromosomes are synapsed as they begin to condense and prematurely enter M phase in oocyte nuclei. Taken together with the analysis presented above, these observations suggest that late-pachytene-stage, or possibly early-diplotene-stage nuclei, are driven into M phase prematurely in mutants via CDK-1 activation. Consistent with this interpretation, pachytene-stage nuclei often persist proximally to the loop following in mutants, although the chromosomes ultimately decondense and the nuclei enlarge (Figure 9C).Nuclei near the spermatheca in mutants were often HIM-3-negative andREC-8-positive (Figure S8, C and D), suggesting that mutant oocytes might acquire proliferative characteristics as they move even further proximally, subsequent to their initial M-phase entry immediately after pachytene. We examined whether proximal oocyte nuclei enter S phase by assessing their ability to incorporate the nucleoside analog EdU. DNA replication is completed during the very early stages of meiosis, so normal oocyte nuclei do not incorporate EdU after a short pulse of exposure (4 hr); only mitotic and premeiotic cells in the distal arm incorporate EdU as they pass through S phase (Figure S9, A and C). We anticipated that nuclei in the proximal gonad arm would incorporate EdU, particularly since some of these nuclei become polyploid (Figure 1, B and H). Contrary to our expectation, when we examined the germ lines of ; animals, which incorporate EdU in distal nuclei (Figure S9B), we did not observe strong EdU incorporation in nuclei in the proximal arm either near the loop or more proximally near the spermatheca (Figure S9D) (C. Spike, unpublished results). However, upon overexposure, some weak EdU incorporation was noted in oocyte nuclei shortly after the end of pachytene (Figure S9D).We think that the relatively weak and patchy EdU incorporation observed in nuclei immediately after pachytene likely reflects repair DNA synthesis. DNA damage might occur when late-pachytene-stage chromosomes are driven into M phase prematurely. The polyploidy that we observed proximally in mutant oocytes (Figure 1, B and H) might arise from the fusion of proximal nuclei undergoing repeated rounds of M-phase entry and involve the collapse of cellular partitions between cells. Alternatively, uptake or detection of the EdU label might be compromised in this abnormal proximal cell population. Thus, we are unable to exclude the possibility that some proximal nuclei replicate their DNA after exiting from M phase. Nonetheless, the absence of an apparent S phase immediately after premature M-phase entry of mutant oocytes is consistent with the interpretation that they retain a meiotic fate at the point of their initial M-phase entry.In summary, we find that nuclei in null and strong loss-of-function animals exit meiotic prophase and enter M phase near the end of pachytene, possibly at the pachytene–diplotene transition. M-phase entry occurs in cells specified to become oocytes (Figure 8H) with synapsed homologous chromosomes (Figure 10). Chromosome separation or segregation occurs at least occasionally (Figure 8E) and is mediated by a centriole-containing spindle (Figure 8G). The LIN-41 expression pattern suggests that could be required to prevent M-phase entry in all developing oocytes, which would normally grow, eliminate centrioles, and organize meiotic chromosomes into bivalents before undergoing meiotic maturation. We were able to test this hypothesis using the temperature-sensitive ts) mutant. ts) mutants exhibit lower rates of M-phase entry at the end of pachytene, relative to alleles (Table 2), which permits some (at 25°) or most (at 22°) ts) mutant oocytes to progress through diplotene and into diakinesis. We examined ts) oocytes at 22° and 25° and identified oocytes with bivalent chromosomes that had entered M phase prematurely (Figure 8, I–K). Our phenotypic analysis of ts) is therefore consistent with the idea that prevents meiotic M-phase entry during late, as well as early, stages of oogenesis.
Premature M-phase entry of lin-41 mutant oogenic nuclei is inhibited when germ cells arrest in pachytene
Oocyte nuclei in strong loss-of-function animals appear to enter M phase near the very end of pachytene. Thus, causing oogenic germ cells to arrest in pachytene might reduce or eliminate M-phase entry in mutants, depending on the efficiency of the imposed block to pachytene progression. We tested this hypothesis using a strong loss-of-function mutation in the gene. In mutants, oogenic cells arrest during pachytene and do not progress into diplotene and diakinesis or accumulate phosphorylated histone H3 (Karashima ; Maruyama ). However, smaller germ cell nuclei were occasionally observed interspersed with arrested pachytene-stage oogenic nuclei (Karashima ). We verified these observations and determined that is largely, but not entirely, epistatic to . Most ; oogenic germ cells remain in pachytene, with only a small number of nuclei exhibiting condensed chromosomes that accumulate phosphorylated histone H3 (Figure 11A). Such nuclei resemble those found in mutants and are often observed near pH3-negative nuclei exhibiting decondensed chromosome morphologies (Figure S10, G–I). Although the majority of nuclei remain arrested in pachytene in ; double mutants, the number of gonads with pH3-positive nuclei, as well as the typical number of pH3-positive nuclei in each gonad, increases as the animals age (Figure 11A). One possibility is that a small fraction of mutant pachytene-stage nuclei, although not able to progress to diplotene, can nonetheless progress to the point in pachytene at which is required to prevent premature M-phase entry. Multiple nuclear divisions could contribute to the increase in numbers of pH3-positive nuclei over time. Alternatively, our observations could in part reflect a slight temporal delay in the switch from spermatogenesis to oogenesis, since younger mutant adults sometimes appear engaged in spermatogenic meiotic divisions (Figure S10, A–C); however, such nuclei were excluded in Figure 11A through the simultaneous assessment of sexual fate (Figure S10). Yet, our results might be explained if mutant pachytene-stage germ cells are sometimes confused as to their sexual fate, on occasion only committing to the female fate late in pachytene. Indeed, also functions in the hermaphrodite sperm-to-oocyte switch (Otori ). In any event, the number of ; nuclei that exit from pachytene is small enough for us to conclude that most ; pachytene-stage nuclei must be unable to enter M phase either because they have not developed to the very late stage of pachytene where nuclei enter M phase or because they are abnormal in some other way.
Figure 11
Genes that regulate meiotic progression or the cell cycle promote M phase in lin-41 oocytes. (A) The number of postmitotic nuclei with chromosomally associated phospho-histone H3 (pH3+) in the germ lines of animals 24 or 48 hr past the mid-L4 stage. Individual germline counts (black diamonds) and average numbers (shaded bars) are shown for each genotype. (B and C) cdc-25.3 stimulates M-phase entry in lin-41(n2914) hermaphrodites. lin-41(n2914); cdc-25.3(ok358) germ lines (n = 30) have a significantly reduced number of proximal pH3-positive oocyte nuclei immediately after pachytene compared to equivalently staged lin-41 controls (n = 27) (B). Similar results are observed when the anaphase-promoting complex is disabled in emb-30(ts) animals, so that lin-41 (n = 25) and lin-41; cdc-25.3 (n = 43) nuclei are trapped in M phase after exiting from pachytene (C). Box plot whiskers and diamonds indicate minimum/maximum values and averages, respectively, and asterisks indicate significance (P < 0.001) in B and C. All animals in C were also homozygous for the linked ced-7(n1892) mutation.
Genes that regulate meiotic progression or the cell cycle promote M phase in lin-41 oocytes. (A) The number of postmitotic nuclei with chromosomally associated phospho-histone H3 (pH3+) in the germ lines of animals 24 or 48 hr past the mid-L4 stage. Individual germline counts (black diamonds) and average numbers (shaded bars) are shown for each genotype. (B and C) cdc-25.3 stimulates M-phase entry in lin-41(n2914) hermaphrodites. lin-41(n2914); cdc-25.3(ok358) germ lines (n = 30) have a significantly reduced number of proximal pH3-positive oocyte nuclei immediately after pachytene compared to equivalently staged lin-41 controls (n = 27) (B). Similar results are observed when the anaphase-promoting complex is disabled in emb-30(ts) animals, so that lin-41 (n = 25) andlin-41; cdc-25.3 (n = 43) nuclei are trapped in M phase after exiting from pachytene (C). Box plot whiskers and diamonds indicate minimum/maximum values and averages, respectively, and asterisks indicate significance (P < 0.001) in B and C. All animals in C were also homozygous for the linked ced-7(n1892) mutation.Pachytenearrest may also prevent -dependent M-phase entry in germ lines. We constructed this double-mutant combination because the GLD-2 cytoplasmic poly(A) polymerase (Wang ) andLIN-41 copurify with OMA RNPs and function at similar stages of oogenesis, suggesting that they might regulate overlapping sets of oocyte mRNAs (Spike ). Indeed, in the accompanying article in this issue (Spike ), we observed an overlap between the mRNA components of OMA RNPs and those copurifying with GLD-2 (Kim ). Like mutants, strong loss-of-function mutants make oocytes that reach the pachytene stage of meiotic prophase, but then become abnormal and fail to enter diplotene or diakinesis (Kadyk and Kimble 1998). Unlike mutants, however, oocytes do not enter M phase immediately after pachytene. Instead, a small number of older oocytes with abnormal pH3-positive nuclei are sometimes present (Figure 11A); a few of these nuclei undergo NEBD and appear to be in M phase (C. Spike, unpublished results). mutant oocytes do not enter M phase prematurely (Figure 11A), but instead they appear to arrest in pachytene (Figure 12, A–D, H, and I), a phenotype not observed in either single mutant (Figure 1H) (Kadyk and Kimble 1998). double mutants therefore appear to exhibit a synthetic phenotype that we examined in more detail. Oocyte cellularization occurs prematurely in mutants (Figure 1H; Figure 12B) but is spatially delayed in mutants relative to the wild type (Figure 12, A and C). Cellularization is even more abnormal in mutants, however, and completely fails in many animals (Figure 12D). Likewise, expression of the oocyte marker RME-2, which appears to be reduced and spatially altered in mutants, is further reduced or absent from mutants (Figure 12, E–G). Expression of MSP is unaltered, however, suggesting that germ cells are not sexually transformed (Figure 12, H and I). We conclude that multiple events that normally occur around the time when germ cells transition from pachytene into diplotene fail in mutants, consistent with the interpretation that meiotic germ cells arrest in pachytene in these animals.
Figure 12
gld-2 lin-41 oogenic germ cells arrest in pachytene. (A–D) Oocyte cellularization in gld-2 lin-41 and control day-1 adults at 20°; Z-series images of the rhodamine-phalloidin-labeled actin cytoskeleton (red) were used to determine the approximate extent of the rachis (white line) in animals of each genotype. Wild-type oocytes cellularize after transitioning from diplotene (Dp) into diakinesis (Dk), immediately after the loop (A). Asterisks in A indicate the last two detectable connections between oocytes and the rachis in the wild type; both are in a different focal plane. lin-41 oocytes cellularize prematurely (B), near the transition from pachytene into M phase (Mp). The rachis remains open longer in gld-2 and gld-2 lin-41 animals (C and D), with cellularization failing completely in some gld-2 lin-41 animals; 59% of gld-2 lin-41 germ lines had regions where oocyte cellularization appeared to have failed (n = 22) compared to 0% of gld-2 and lin-41 germ lines (n = 20 and n = 32, respectively). (E–G) RME-2 expression is reduced in gld-2 lin-41 animals compared to either single mutant. (H and I) The nonspermatogenic germ cells of gld-2 lin-41 animals have synapsed chromosomes and appear to arrest in pachytene (arrowheads). Spermatogenic cells are MSP-positive (red), and nonspermatogenic cells are MSP-negative. Bars, 20 μm.
gld-2lin-41 oogenic germ cells arrest in pachytene. (A–D) Oocyte cellularization in gld-2lin-41 and control day-1 adults at 20°; Z-series images of the rhodamine-phalloidin-labeled actin cytoskeleton (red) were used to determine the approximate extent of the rachis (white line) in animals of each genotype. Wild-type oocytes cellularize after transitioning from diplotene (Dp) into diakinesis (Dk), immediately after the loop (A). Asterisks in A indicate the last two detectable connections between oocytes and the rachis in the wild type; both are in a different focal plane. lin-41 oocytes cellularize prematurely (B), near the transition from pachytene into M phase (Mp). The rachis remains open longer in gld-2 andgld-2lin-41 animals (C and D), with cellularization failing completely in some gld-2lin-41 animals; 59% of gld-2lin-41 germ lines had regions where oocyte cellularization appeared to have failed (n = 22) compared to 0% of gld-2 andlin-41 germ lines (n = 20 and n = 32, respectively). (E–G) RME-2 expression is reduced in gld-2lin-41 animals compared to either single mutant. (H and I) The nonspermatogenic germ cells of gld-2lin-41 animals have synapsed chromosomes and appear to arrest in pachytene (arrowheads). Spermatogenic cells are MSP-positive (red), and nonspermatogenic cells are MSP-negative. Bars, 20 μm.
LIN-41 is antagonized by OMA-1/2 and functions upstream of CDC-25.3
In wild-type oocytes, exit from meiotic prophase is stimulated by MSP-dependent signaling and requires the functionally redundant CCCH zinc-finger proteins OMA-1 and OMA-2. function upstream of , a conserved kinase known to inhibit CDK-1 activation and repress premature oocyte meiotic maturation and M phase (Detwiler ; Burrows ). RNAi depletion of CDK-1 prevents oocytes from entering M phase after pachytene (Figure 9, C and D), but this phenotype is not suppressed when sperm or OMA-1/2 is absent (Figure 9, G–J), indicating that these factors are either upstream of, or irrelevant to, function at this early stage of oogenesis. We also examined more developed ts) oocytes, which are able to progress into diakinesis before entering M phase (Figure 8, I–L). M-phase entry in ts) oocytes at 22° requires OMA-1/2 but not the presence of sperm (Table 2). ts); ; oocytes are also notably larger than ts) oocytes (C. Spike, unpublished results), as might be expected since OMA-1/2 inhibits oocyte growth (Detwiler ; Govindan ). Thus, LIN-41 andOMA-1/2 exhibit an antagonistic relationship: LIN-41 inhibits M-phase entry and oocyte cellularization whereas OMA-1/2 promotes these events. Furthermore, our observations suggest that is epistatic to for its function in preventing the premature M-phase entry of pachytene-stage oogenic cells, whereas appears to be required for the entry of proximal oocytes into M phase in ts) mutants.LIN-41 was identified as a component of OMA RNPs, and these two proteins appear to repress the translation of some of the same target mRNAs during oogenesis (Spike ). One of these target mRNAs encodes CDC-25.3, a CDC-25-family phosphatase predicted to activate CDK-1 by removing inhibitory phosphorylations. Other CDC-25-family proteins are known to play essential roles in germline development in C. elegans (Ashcroft ; Ashcroft and Golden 2002; Clucas ; Kim ; Kim ; Yoon ), but CDC-25.3 appears to be more important for larval development. Animals homozygous for the deletion are fertile and produce an approximately normal number of embryos (312 ± 39, n = 5). Most of these embryos hatch (92%, n = 1544), but only 32% develop into L4-stage larvae or adults in a timely fashion (within 2.5 days after egg laying at 20°; n = 828), and most appear to arrest as young larvae (Figure S11, A and B). Although the mRNA is present during oogenesis (Spike ), germ lines are indistinguishable from the wild type (Figure S11, C–E), consistent with the idea that CDC-25.3 does not normally play a significant role in germline development. Because CDC-25.3 likely activates CDK-1, which is required for -dependent M-phase entry, we used a genetic epistasis test to examine whether ectopic expression of CDC-25.3 might contribute to premature M-phase entry in oocytes. ; oocytes clearly enter M phase after pachytene, but there is a significant reduction in the number of oocyte nuclei accumulating phospho-histone H3 in ; animals compared to alone (Figure 11B) , suggesting that CDC-25.3 might help to stimulate, but is not sufficient to trigger, M-phase entry in mutants. Because the oocytes of animals appear to cycle in and out of M phase (Figure 7D), we trapped them in metaphase using ts). Animals were upshifted to the restrictive temperature prior to oogenesis to ensure that oocytes would be trapped in M phase immediately after exiting from pachytene. Fewer oocytes in M phase were observed in ; triple-mutant animals compared to ; controls (Figure 11C), consistent with the idea that ectopic CDC-25.3 stimulates oocytes to enter M phase immediately after pachytene.
CDK-1 is required for the elimination of GFP::LIN-41
The preceding analysis established that inhibits M-phase entry of developing oocytes both at the late pachytene stage and at diakinesis. Our results suggest that LIN-41 regulates M-phase entry in part through the translational repression of the CDK-1 inhibitor, CDC-25.3. For the most proximal oocyte to mature in the wild type, there needs to be a mechanism that antagonizes LIN-41 function. Genetic epistasis analysis suggests that OMA-1/2 may be part of this mechanism because oocytes do not undergo meiotic maturation in ts); ; triple mutants (Table 2). We were therefore intrigued by the observation that LIN-41 and GFP::LIN-41 begin to be eliminated from oocytes as they undergo meiotic maturation (Figure 3; Figure 4). To ask whether the elimination of GFP::LIN-41 requires CDK-1 function, we fed ::tev::s::lin-41]) L4-stage hermaphrodites with dsRNA-expressing bacteria. GFP::LIN-41 persisted in all fertilized one-cell arrested embryos accumulating in the uterus following (Figure 4B; n = 50 day-1 and day-2 adults), but did not persist after control (n = 37 animals) or (n = 32 animals), which also causes a one-cell arrest (Chase ). We next tested whether CDK-1 activation is sufficient to cause GFP::LIN-41 elimination by feeding ::tev::s::lin-41]) L4-stage hermaphrodites with dsRNA-expressing bacteria. Indeed, GFP::LIN-41 disappeared prematurely from most of the adult gonad arms examined (69/73 day-2 adults). In the more severely affected animals, the proximal gonad arm filled with small abnormal oocytes resulting from premature meiotic maturation as previously reported (Burrows ), and GFP::LIN-41 was typically absent from the entire proximal arm. In animals more mildly affected by the treatment, normal-appearing oocytes formed in the proximal arm, but GFP::LIN-41 was eliminated prematurely from oocytes that had not undergone NEBD (Figure 4C). By contrast, the disappearance of GFP::LIN-41 during meiotic maturation required neither the MBK-2 M-phase kinase nor the activity of the anaphase-promoting complex, as revealed by analysis of (n = 65 gonad arms examined) and ts) mutants (n = 40 gonad arms examined), respectively (Figure 4, D and E). Since OMA-1/2 is required for CDK-1 activation (Detwiler ), the antagonism between the OMA proteins andLIN-41, and the regulation of LIN-41 by CDK-1, might be components of the mechanism that spatially restricts meiotic maturation to the most proximal oocyte.
Discussion
Here we present genetic and phenotypic analyses of the essential roles of the TRIM-NHL protein LIN-41 during oogenesis in C. elegans. Our analysis reveals LIN-41 as an inhibitor of oocyte M-phase entry, a promoter of oocyte growth, and a maintainer of oocyte quality. In this capacity, LIN-41 appears to function in opposition to the OMA RNA-binding proteins with which it associates in an oogenic translational regulatory RNP complex (Spike ). By contrast, is not required for spermatogenesis or male fertility. In null mutants, pachytene-stage oogenic cells fail to progress to diplotene, the stage in which centrioles are eliminated for acentriolar meiotic spindle assembly (Mikeladze-Dvali ). Instead, developing oocytes in null mutants exhibit a remarkable phenotype: they activate CDK-1, enter M phase, assemble a spindle, and attempt to segregate chromosomes.Several observations suggest the null mutant phenotype is not simply a “return to mitosis” phenotype as observed in mutant pachytene-stage oogenic cells (Francis ,b) or in mutant primary spermatocytes (Subramaniam and Seydoux 2003), both of which ultimately form germline tumors of mitotically cycling undifferentiated germ cells. First, examination of HIM-3, a meiosis-specific protein that localizes to the axial cores of synapsed homologous chromosomes during pachytene, andSYP-1 andSYP-2, proteins of the central region of the synaptonemal complex, confirms that null mutant oogenic cells proceed directly from late pachytene into M phase. Second, instead of producing undifferentiated germline tumors, pachytene-stage cells that enter M phase appear oogenic and begin to express the oocyte yolk receptor RME-2 (andOMA-1::GFP), continuing to do so for a period of time. In the most proximal region of the gonad, many cells lose expression of oocyte markers (RME-2 andOMA-1::GFP); however, this correlates with their increasing state of disorganization andpolyploidy and their acquisition of the capacity to express a somatic marker (unc-119p::gfp).Third, we used EdU labeling to test whether the abnormal oogenic nuclei in null mutants enter S phase after pachytene, as would be expected from a “return to mitosis” phenotype. While our conditions detected S phase in the distal stem cell population in null mutants, we found scant evidence that oogenic cells replicate their genome after pachytene. Rather, we observed relatively weak and patchy EdU incorporation immediately after pachytene, possibly reflecting repair DNA synthesis. It would not be hard to believe that DNA damage might ensue when chromosomes are driven into M phase from late pachytene or early diplotene. Indeed, we observed that components of the central region of the synaptonemal complex (SYP-1 andSYP-2) relocalized to foci and disassembled as oocyte nuclei entered M phase. This abrupt disassembly of the synaptonemal complex might represent an aberrant process because cytoplasmic remnants of the synaptonemal complex persist, which is not observed in the wild type. Finally, in null mutants, we observed large apoptotic cell corpses in the proximal gonad arm that are engulfed by sheath cells, as revealed by acridine orange staining. Importantly, both developmental and DNA-damage-induced apoptosis of germ cells are restricted to oogenesis (Gumienny ; Gartner ; Jaramillo-Lambert ). By this criteria also, the proximal germ cells in mutants appear to have adopted the oocyte fate; however, they are defective in completing the oogenic program. In any case, the final fate of the abnormal cells in the most proximal region likely reflects the downstream consequences of premature M-phase entry because reduces their capacity to express a somatic marker (Figure S7).Instead of a “return to mitosis,” the null mutant phenotype appears to be a consequence of the premature activation of CDK-1 in oogenic cells in late pachytene or early diplotene. Consistent with this view, a null mutation in , which encodes a Cdc25-family phosphatase predicted to activate CDK-1, reduces the number of pachytene-stage cells that enter M phase in null mutants. In the accompanying article in this issue, we show that the mRNA, like LIN-41, is an OMA RNP component (Spike ). The germline expression of OMA-1/2 andLIN-41 are defining features of the oocyte fate, and these proteins mediate 3′ UTR-dependent translational repression of . The simplest interpretation is that translational derepression of contributes to premature M-phase entry of mutant oocytes early in their development.While this work was under review, Tocchini reported the isolation of two strong loss-of-function alleles in a genetic screen for mutants that express a reporter of zygotic gene transcription in the germ line. The activation of zygotic transcription normally occurs after the oocyte-to-embryo transition, which is dependent on oocyte meiotic maturation (reviewed by Robertson and Lin 2013). Our data suggest that a major aspect of the oocyte meiotic maturation program, M-phase entry resulting from CDK-1 activation, occurs prematurely in mutants and that the abnormal end-stage phenotype of mutant oocytes is likely a consequence of this defect. Tocchini proposed that LIN-41 has a specific function as a regulator of pluripotency in the germ line. The finding that OMA RNPs contain regulators of embryonic cell-fate determination (e.g., MEX-1, MEX-3, POS-1, andSPN-4) in addition to LIN-41 (Spike ) might be relevant to the potential involvement of LIN-41 in the regulation of pluripotency (Tocchini ). However, it is worth noting that, in C. elegans, pachytene-stage germ cells appear to be the most transcriptionally active with RNA polymerase II activity declining as oocytes transition from diplotene to diakinesis (Starck 1977; Gibert ; Schisa ; Kelly ; Walker ). Since null mutant oocytes do not as a rule progress to diplotene or diakinesis, they might not be predicted to downregulate RNA polymerase II transcriptional activity after pachytene. Thus, premature M-phase entry might have multiple consequences that contribute to the terminal fate of pachytene-stage oogenic cells in null mutants.Analysis of mutant germ lines also suggests a major role in promoting oocyte growth. Developing oocytes are connected to the cytoplasmic core of the gonad by “ring channels” (Wolke ) through which they receive proteins, RNAs, metabolites, and organelles via actomyosin-dependent cytoplasmic streaming (Hirsh ; Maddox ; Wolke ; Govindan ; Nadarajan ; Amini ). Analysis of the syncytial organization of adult null mutant gonads indicates that the cytoplasmic core of the gonad narrows and terminates near the loop region, coincident with the premature cellularization of developing oocytes. Both the premature cellularization and M-phase entry of pachytene-stage oogenic cells in null mutants require the function of the GLD-2 cytoplasmic poly(A) polymerase, which is also a component of OMA RNPs (Spike ); double mutants exhibit a synthetic phenotype in which developing oocytes fail to cellularize but arrest in pachytene.Analysis of reduction-of-function mutants also supports a role in facilitating the production of high-quality oocytes that can complete embryogenesis. A high incidence of embryonic lethality (60–80%) and X-chromosome nondisjunction (∼10- to 20-fold higher than in the wild type) is observed in ts) mutants at a semipermissive temperature (22°) and in several of its intragenic revertants at 25°. Thus, LIN-41 is not simply an arbiter of the meiotic maturation decision: its proper function is needed to produce high-quality oocytes. The LIN-41 expression pattern in the germ line is consistent with this role. LIN-41 is present in the oogenic germ line from the mid-pachytene stage, but begins to be eliminated during meiotic maturation and is absent from embryos. One possibility is that the high levels of embryonic lethality and meiotic chromosome nondisjunction in reduction-of-function mutants are a secondary consequence of subtle defects in the oocyte growth process. Alternatively, defects in translational regulation might disrupt the protein composition of mutant oocytes.LIN-41 is best known for its role in the developmental timing pathway in somatic cells where it is a target of the microRNA (Reinhart ; Slack ; Vella ; Bagga ; Del Rio-Albrechtsen ; Harris and Horvitz 2011; Vladia ; Zou ). LIN-41 is highly conserved, as is its regulation by the microRNA (Lancman ; Schulman ; Maller Schulman ; Worringer ). Our data indicate that reduced function does not affect LIN-41 levels in the germ line, which is consistent with observations suggesting that the microRNA might not be expressed in the germ line (Lau ). Rather, the expression of LIN-41 in the germ line is associated with the oocyte fate.The prevailing view is that LIN-41 proteins function as regulators of post-transcriptional gene expression. This model stems from the observation that LIN-41 prevents the accumulation of the LIN-29 protein in the L3 larval stage (Slack ), whereas mRNA expression is first observed in the L2 stage (Rougvie and Ambros 1995; Bettinger ). LIN-41 was proposed to function in one of two ways: either as an RNA-binding protein that might repress the translation of LIN-29 or as a RING-domain-containing E3 ubiquitin ligase that might regulate LIN-29 stability (Slack ). Several reports are consistent with the idea that LIN-41 proteins can function as E3 ubiquitin ligases (Rybak ; Loedige ); however, the RING domain needed for ubiquitin ligase activity appears dispensable for mRNA repression (Loedige ; Worringer ). We did not isolate mutations in the RING domain; however, a definitive interpretation is not possible because of its small target size. Tocchini used site-directed mutagenesis to alter five key cysteine residues that contribute to the coordination of zinc molecules necessary for maintaining the structure and function of the RING domain. Because this mutant form of LIN-41 appears fully functional, LIN-41 E3 ubiquitin ligase activity appears to be dispensable for oocyte and somatic development.Consistent with a role in mRNA regulation, the Drosophila NHL-repeat domain protein Brat was recently shown to bind the hunchback mRNA and mediate translational repression (Loedige ). By artificially tethering LIN-41 to reporter mRNA constructs via bacteriophage λ N protein sequences, a role for mammalianLIN-41 as a repressor of mRNA function was demonstrated (Loedige ). Recent results show that humanLIN-41 promotes reprogramming of induced pluripotent stem cells in a mechanism that may involve translational repression of the prodifferentiation transcription factor EGR1 (Worringer ). In this and in the accompanying article in this issue (Spike ), we isolated LIN-41 as a protein component of a translational regulatory RNP complex critical for oogenesis. Our mutational analysis of underscores the importance of the NHL-repeat domain: missense mutations in conserved residues cause sterility. We further showed a role for LIN-41 in regulating oocyte M-phase entry in part through the 3′ UTR-mediated translational repression of . These results suggest that LIN-41 functions in the germ line as a translational regulator to control oocyte growth and meiotic maturation.This genetic study represents an extension of biochemical and genomic analyses undertaken to understand how the OMA-1/2 RNA-binding proteins regulate oocyte growth and meiotic maturation (Spike ). LIN-41 was identified as a protein component of OMA RNPs and as one of two proteins shown to repress the translation of tested OMA target mRNAs. Phenotypic analysis shows that the LIN-41 and the OMA proteins exhibit an antagonistic relationship: LIN-41 inhibits M-phase entry and oocyte cellularization whereas the OMA proteins promote these events (Figure 13). Genetic analysis reveals a complex epistatic relationship between and . Analysis of the triple mutant using null alleles demonstrates that is epistatic: pachytene-stage oogenic cells prematurely enter M phase irrespective of activity. The translational derepression of contributes to this phenotype in part. We were able to explore the genetic relationship between and in proximal diakinesis-stage oocytes using the ts) mutation at a semipermissive temperature (22°). Under these conditions, many ts) gonads exhibit evidence of premature M-phase entry (meiotic maturation) of proximal oocytes irrespective of the presence of sperm, further demonstrating that is a negative regulator of oocyte meiotic maturation. Importantly, oocytes in ts); ; triple mutants do not enter M phase. This result confirms the redundant requirement of and for oocyte meiotic maturation and suggests that may not be needed at this stage, with the caveat that this analysis depends on the use of a non-null allele. This interpretation is consistent with our observation that LIN-41 protein levels decline rapidly upon the onset of oocyte meiotic maturation and that the elimination of LIN-41 from oocytes undergoing meiotic maturation requires CDK-1 activity. These observations raise the possibility that LIN-41 must be inactivated and degraded for meiotic maturation to occur properly. Taken together, these data support a model in which LIN-41 and the OMA proteins coordinately control oocyte growth and the proper spatial and temporal execution of the meiotic maturation decision (Figure 13). One possibility is that the OMA proteins function to inhibit LIN-41, thereby promoting CDK-1 activation and presumably LIN-41 degradation. Alternatively, the OMA proteins might antagonize LIN-41 through the activation of CDK-1.
Figure 13
LIN-41 and OMA-1/2 control oocyte growth and spatially regulate M-phase entry during oogenesis. (A) LIN-41 promotes oocyte growth and inhibits M-phase entry, whereas OMA-1/2 inhibits oocyte growth and promotes M-phase entry. (B) LIN-41 inhibits M-phase entry in part through the 3′ UTR-mediated translational repression of cdc-25.3, which encodes an activator of CDK-1. In turn, the activation of CDK-1 during meiotic maturation promotes the elimination of LIN-41. We speculate that the OMA proteins antagonize LIN-41 function either through GLD-2-dependent translational activation of mRNA targets or directly through some other means.
LIN-41 andOMA-1/2 control oocyte growth and spatially regulate M-phase entry during oogenesis. (A) LIN-41 promotes oocyte growth and inhibits M-phase entry, whereas OMA-1/2 inhibits oocyte growth and promotes M-phase entry. (B) LIN-41 inhibits M-phase entry in part through the 3′ UTR-mediated translational repression of cdc-25.3, which encodes an activator of CDK-1. In turn, the activation of CDK-1 during meiotic maturation promotes the elimination of LIN-41. We speculate that the OMA proteins antagonize LIN-41 function either through GLD-2-dependent translational activation of mRNA targets or directly through some other means.Since the and mutant phenotypes are polar opposites, it is intriguing that their proteins are found in an RNP and repress the translation of shared mRNA targets, including . While the failure to repress translation contributes to the null mutant phenotype, translational derepression of in ; double mutants is likely phenotypically irrelevant because these oocytes fail to enter M phase. OMA RNPs contain translational activators (e.g., GLD-2), and and interact genetically. Thus, OMA-LIN-41 RNPs might toggle crucial mRNA targets between activation and repression, as dictated by upstream signaling; however, such mRNAs have not been identified (Figure 13). A second possibility is that LIN-41 might function in part as a component of an OMA-independent RNP complex and that such complexes might be dynamic and highly regulated during oogenesis. In this regard, it is notable that LIN-41 expression commences in mid-pachytene, whereas the onset of OMA-1 expression occurs in late pachytene just prior to the loop (Detwiler ; Lee and Schedl 2004). A third possibility is that a subset of LIN-41 or OMA-1/2 activities might occur independently of translational regulation. A goal for future work will be to explain the in vivo genetic behavior of , , and in the regulation of oocyte growth and meiotic maturation at a biochemical level.
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