Questions, Feedback & Help
Send us an email and we'll get back to you ASAP. Or you can read our Frequently Asked Questions.
  • page settings
  • hide sidebar
  • show empty fields
  • layout
  • (too narrow)
  • open all
  • close all
Resources » Paper

Svendsen PC et al. (1995) Development "The C. elegans neuronally expressed homeobox gene ceh-10 is closely related to genes expressed in the vertebrate eye."

  • History

  • Referenced

  • Tree Display

  • My Favorites

  • My Library

  • Comments on Svendsen PC et al. (1995) Development "The C. elegans neuronally expressed homeobox gene ceh-10 is closely related to genes expressed in the vertebrate eye." (0)

  • Overview

    PMID:
    Status:
    Publication type:
    Journal_article
    WormBase ID:
    WBPaper00002186

    Svendsen PC, & McGhee JD (1995). The C. elegans neuronally expressed homeobox gene ceh-10 is closely related to genes expressed in the vertebrate eye. Development, 121, 1253-62. doi:10.1242/dev.121.5.1253

    We describe the homeobox gene ceh-10 from the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. The homeodomain of ceh-10 is closely related to the homeodomains of two genes recently cloned from the vertebrate retina, Chx10 from mice and Vsx-1 from goldfish. We show that the sequence conservation extends well beyond the homeodomain and includes a region (named the CVC domain) of roughly 60 amino acids immediately C-terminal to the homeodomain. As assayed in transgenic worms, the promoter region of ceh-10 directs expression of a lacZ reporter gene to a small number of neurons. We draw a parallel between the bipolar cells of the inner nuclear layer of the vertebrate retina, which express Chx10 and Vsx-1, and an interneuron in C. elegans called AIY, which expresses ceh-10. AIY receives synaptic input from a sensory cell, just as do bipolar cells of the vertebrate retina. In C. elegans, the sensory cell AFD is not known to be photosensitive but is known to be thermosensitive; moreover, a cell with similar position in the amphids of other nematodes has been suggested indeed to be photosensitive. Our results emphasize the highly conserved nature of sensory regulatory mechanisms and suggest one way in which photosensitive organelles might have originated in evolution.


    Tip: Seeing your name marked red? Please help us identify you.