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Author Notes:

Tim Schedl, ts@wustl.edu

We thank our colleagues in worm community for unpublished alleles: Iva Greenwald, Columbia University, lag-1(ar611); William Kelly, Emory University, ckSi11. We also thank Julie Ni and Sam Gu for their help in the initial phases of ChIP-seq analysis and our colleagues Mike Nonet, Jane Hubbard, Iva Greenwald, Dave Hansen, David Greenstein, Jordan Ward, and Dan Dickenson for helpful advice and discussions. We thank WormBase, funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute; the Caenorhabditis Genetics Center, funded by National Institutes of Health Office of Research Infrastructure Programs; and Shohei Mitani and the Japanese National Bioresource Project for strains.

Subjects:

Research Funding:

This work was supported by National Institutes of Health R01 GM-100756 to TS (https://www.nigms.nih.gov/). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Keywords:

  • Science & Technology
  • Life Sciences & Biomedicine
  • Genetics & Heredity
  • CAENORHABDITIS-ELEGANS GENOME
  • MEIOTIC DEVELOPMENT DECISION
  • PUF PROTEIN FBF-2
  • IN-VIVO
  • INTEGRATIVE ANALYSIS
  • GENE-EXPRESSION
  • WIDE ANALYSIS
  • CYCLIN-E
  • DIFFERENTIATION
  • GLD-1

GLP-1 Notch-LAG-1 CSL control of the germline stem cell fate is mediated by transcriptional targets lst-1 and sygl-1

Tools:

Journal Title:

PLOS GENETICS

Volume:

Volume 16, Number 3

Publisher:

, Pages e1008650-e1008650

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Stem cell systems are essential for the development and maintenance of polarized tissues. Intercellular signaling pathways control stem cell systems, where niche cells signal stem cells to maintain the stem cell fate/self-renewal and inhibit differentiation. In the C. elegans germline, GLP-1 Notch signaling specifies the stem cell fate, employing the sequence-specific DNA binding protein LAG-1 to implement the transcriptional response. We undertook a comprehensive genome-wide approach to identify transcriptional targets of GLP-1 signaling. We expected primary response target genes to be evident at the intersection of genes identified as directly bound by LAG-1, from ChIP-seq experiments, with genes identified as requiring GLP-1 signaling for RNA accumulation, from RNA-seq analysis. Furthermore, we performed a time-course transcriptomics analysis following auxin inducible degradation of LAG-1 to distinguish between genes whose RNA level was a primary or secondary response of GLP-1 signaling. Surprisingly, only lst-1 and sygl-1, the two known target genes of GLP-1 in the germline, fulfilled these criteria, indicating that these two genes are the primary response targets of GLP-1 Notch and may be the sole germline GLP-1 signaling protein-coding transcriptional targets for mediating the stem cell fate. In addition, three secondary response genes were identified based on their timing following loss of LAG-1, their lack of a LAG-1 ChIP-seq peak and that their glp-1 dependent mRNA accumulation could be explained by a requirement for lst-1 and sygl-1 activity. Moreover, our analysis also suggests that the function of the primary response genes lst-1 and sygl-1 can account for the glp-1 dependent peak protein accumulation of FBF-2, which promotes the stem cell fate and, in part, for the spatial restriction of elevated LAG-1 accumulation to the stem cell region.

Copyright information:

© 2020 Chen et al

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/rdf).
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