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Development 129, 1497-1508 (2002)
© 2002 The Company of Biologists Limited

TLP-1 is an asymmetric cell fate determinant that responds to Wnt signals and controls male tail tip morphogenesis in C. elegans

Xiaojun Zhao1,*, Ying Yang2,*, David H. A. Fitch2 and Michael A. Herman1,{dagger}

1 Program in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, Division of Biology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, USA
2 Department of Biology, New York University, New York, NY 10003, USA
* These authors contributed equally

{dagger}Author for correspondence (e-mail: mherman{at}ksu.edu)

Accepted 20 December 2001

We have isolated mutations defining a new gene, tlp-1, that affect asymmetric cell fates and morphogenesis during the development of the C. elegans tail. tlp-1 mutations cause defects in the specification of asymmetric cell fates in the descendants of the T blast cell, whose polarity is controlled by Wnt signaling and cause abnormal male tail development leading to the formation of a posterior protrusion reminiscent of ‘leptoderan’, or pointy tailed, nematode species. In wild-type C. elegans males, which have a ‘peloderan’ or rounded tail, retraction of the tail tip hypodermis involves a temporally ordered set of cell fusions and changes in cell shape that appear to be heterochronically delayed in tlp-1 males, suggesting that subtle changes in these events can bring about evolutionary changes in morphology. tlp-1 encodes a C2H2 zinc-finger protein that is a member of the Sp family of transcription factors. A TLP-1::GFP fusion protein is expressed in the nuclei of many cells during early embryogenesis and then becomes restricted primarily to posterior cells. At hatching, it is expressed in several head neurons, the posterior intestine cells, tail hypodermal cells, the T cells and specific T-cell descendents in a pattern that suggests TLP-1 may be asymmetrically expressed during the divisions of the T cell lineage. Furthermore, the asymmetry of TLP-1 expression and function appears to be controlled by Wnt signals that control T cell polarity. These results suggest that tlp-1 encodes a transcription factor required for cellular asymmetry that functions downstream of Wnt signals that control cell polarity, as well as in cell fusion and patterning in the C. elegans tail.

Key words: C. elegans, Cell polarity, Asymmetric cell division, Cell fusion, Morphogenesis male tail, Evolution


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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2002