GLD-4-Mediated Translational Activation Regulates the Size of the Proliferative Germ Cell Pool in the Adult C. elegans Germ Line.
TL;DR: Two interconnected translational activation/repression circuitries of broadly conserved RNA regulators that maintain the balance between adult germ cell proliferation and differentiation are revealed.
read more
Abstract: To avoid organ dysfunction as a consequence of tissue diminution or tumorous growth, a tight balance between cell proliferation and differentiation is maintained in metazoans. However, cell-intrinsic gene expression mechanisms controlling adult tissue homeostasis remain poorly understood. By focusing on the adult Caenorhabditis elegans reproductive tissue, we show that translational activation of mRNAs is a fundamental mechanism to maintain tissue homeostasis. Our genetic experiments identified the Trf4/5-type cytoplasmic poly(A) polymerase (cytoPAP) GLD-4 and its enzymatic activator GLS-1 to perform a dual role in regulating the size of the proliferative zone. Consistent with a ubiquitous expression of GLD-4 cytoPAP in proliferative germ cells, its genetic activity is required to maintain a robust proliferative adult germ cell pool, presumably by regulating many mRNA targets encoding proliferation-promoting factors. Based on translational reporters and endogenous protein expression analyses, we found that gld-4 activity promotes GLP-1/Notch receptor expression, an essential factor of continued germ cell proliferation. RNA-protein interaction assays documented also a physical association of the GLD-4/GLS-1 cytoPAP complex with glp-1 mRNA, and ribosomal fractionation studies established that GLD-4 cytoPAP activity facilitates translational efficiency of glp-1 mRNA. Moreover, we found that in proliferative cells the differentiation-promoting factor, GLD-2 cytoPAP, is translationally repressed by the stem cell factor and PUF-type RNA-binding protein, FBF. This suggests that cytoPAP-mediated translational activation of proliferation-promoting factors, paired with PUF-mediated translational repression of differentiation factors, forms a translational control circuit that expands the proliferative germ cell pool. Our additional genetic experiments uncovered that the GLD-4/GLS-1 cytoPAP complex promotes also differentiation, forming a redundant translational circuit with GLD-2 cytoPAP and the translational repressor GLD-1 to restrict proliferation. Together with previous findings, our combined data reveals two interconnected translational activation/repression circuitries of broadly conserved RNA regulators that maintain the balance between adult germ cell proliferation and differentiation.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
The maternal-to-zygotic transition revisited.
TL;DR: Current understanding of the mechanisms that underlie handover of developmental control to the zygotic genome during the maternal-to-zygotic transition is reviewed.
369
Biology of the Caenorhabditis elegans Germline Stem Cell System.
TL;DR: C. elegans is a powerful model for understanding germline stem cells and stem cell biology and the Notch regulated genetic network that controls the key decision between the stem cell fate and meiotic development occurs under optimal laboratory conditions in adult and larval stages.
119
The full-length transcriptome of C. elegans using direct RNA sequencing.
TL;DR: N nanopore-based direct RNA sequencing is applied to characterize the developmental polyadenylated transcriptome of C. elegans, providing support for 23,865 splice isoforms across 14,611 genes, without the need for computational reconstruction of gene models and determining that poly(A) tail lengths of transcripts vary across development, as do the strengths of previously reported correlations between poly( A) tail length and expression level.
The full-length transcriptome of C. elegans using direct RNA sequencing
TL;DR: N nanopore-based direct RNA sequencing is applied to characterize the developmental polyadenylated transcriptome of C. elegans, providing support for 20,902 splice isoforms across 14,115 genes, without the need for computational reconstruction of gene models and determining that poly(A) tail lengths of transcripts vary across development, as do the strengths of previously reported correlations between poly( A) tail length and expression level.
Spatiotemporal m(i)RNA Architecture and 3′ UTR Regulation in the C. elegans Germline
TL;DR: It is proposed that PIE-1, a transcriptional repressor, functions to maintain spatial gene expression, and the data suggest that cpsf-4 and fipp-1 control differential 3' UTR usage for hundreds of genes.
41
References
Genome-wide analysis of mRNA targets for Caenorhabditis elegans FBF, a conserved stem cell regulator
Aaron M. Kershner,Judith Kimble +1 more
TL;DR: It is found that putative FBF targets represent ∼7% of all protein-coding genes in C. elegans, implicating FBF as a broad-spectrum gene regulator and suggesting that these targets may be critical for FBF’s role in stem cell maintenance.
131
Translational repression of a C. elegans Notch mRNA by the STAR/KH domain protein GLD-1.
TL;DR: It is shown that a 34 nucleotide region of the glp-1 3′ UTR contains two regulatory elements, an element that represses translation in germ cells and posterior cells of the early embryo, and a element that inhibits repressor activity to promote translation in the embryo.
Discovery of two GLP-1/Notch target genes that account for the role of GLP-1/Notch signaling in stem cell maintenance.
TL;DR: Two GLP-1/Notch target genes are found that function redundantly to maintain germ-line stem cells (GSCs) in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and are suggested to be pioneers for a new class of stem cell regulators.
Germline Stem Cells: Origin and Destiny
TL;DR: A perspective highlights some examples of complex regulatory interactions with both the niche and the environment that modulate germline stem cell function in adults.
114
Translational control of maternal glp-1 mRNA by POS-1 and its interacting protein SPN-4 in Caenorhabditis elegans
TL;DR: The balance between POS-1 and SPN-4 controls the translation of maternal glp-1 mRNA, an RNP-type RNA-binding protein present developmentally from the oocyte to the early embryo and its distribution overlaps with that of POS- 1 in the cytoplasm and P granules of the posterior blastomeres.