Genomic strategies reveal a transcriptional cascade that controls synaptic specificity in <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i>
Von Stetina, Stephen Edward
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2005-11-07
Abstract
Proper function of the brain requires that neurons adopt different morphologies and connections. In the nematode <i>C. elegans</i>, VA and VB motor neurons arise from a common precursor cell but adopt different morphologies and accept input from separate sets of command interneurons. In <i>unc-4</i> mutants, VA motor neurons are miswired with VB-type inputs. We have proposed that miswiring results when VB genes are ectopically expressed in the VAs in <i>unc-4</i> mutants. Previous work revealed that UNC-4 functions with the UNC-37/Groucho co-repressor protein to repress the VB-specific genes <i>acr-5, del-1, glr-4</i>. However, our genetic data rule out roles for these VB genes in synaptic choice. To identify the missing <i>unc-4</i> target genes, a microarray-based strategy for profiling VA motor neurons was adopted.
A comparison of VA-specific transcripts isolated by mRNA-tagging from wildtype and <i>unc-37</i> mutant animals revealed ~250 upregulated transcripts in <i>unc-37</i> animals. One of these genes, <i>ceh-12</i>, is the <i>C. elegans</i> homolog of HB9, a homeodomain transcription factor with conserved roles in motor neuron fate in flies and vertebrates (Arber et al 1999, Broihier and Skeath 2002). In <i>C. elegans, ceh-12</i>::GFP is exclusively expressed in VB motor neurons in wildtype animals. In <i>unc-4</i> and <i>unc-37</i> mutants, <i>ceh-12</i>::GFP is also expressed in VA motor neurons as suggested by the microarray data. Thus, CEH-12 is a strong candidate for an UNC-4 target gene that regulates synaptic choice.
To test this idea, the <i>unc-4</i> promoter was used to drive CEH-12 expression in wildype VA motor neurons. These animals exhibit an Unc-4 like backward movement defect, as expected for a model in which ectopic CEH-12 is sufficient to impose VB type inputs. In addition, we also showed that <i>ceh-12</i> deletion mutants are partial suppressors of Unc-4 movement, thereby confirming that CEH-12 is also required for the Unc-4 miswiring defect. We conclude the VB-specific gene, <i>ceh-12</i>, is normally repressed in VA motor neurons to prevent the imposition of VB-type inputs. The incomplete suppression of <i>unc-4</i>, however, suggests that UNC-4 also controls other downstream target genes that function in parallel pathways to regulate synaptic choice.