We use the C-lineage as a model to study how neuronal potential is asymmetrically inherited to establish left-right (L/R) asymmetric neurogenesis. The C blastomere undergoes 6 successive rounds of cell division to produce L/R symmetric pairs of body wall muscles and hypodermal cells from both sides of the lineage, and two glutamatergic neurons, DVC and PVR, which arise asymmetrically from the left side of the lineage only. Previously, we showed that asymmetric expression of the bHLH proneural gene
hlh-14/Ascl1 is required for this L/R asymmetric neurogenesis event. To identify genes that regulate
hlh-14 expression and thus affect neuronal specification within the lineage, we have conducted two genetic screens: a forward genetic screen for mutants that fail to express fate makers for DVC and PVR and a 4D-lineage based screen of a collection of temperature-sensitive embryonic lethal mutants. We have isolated eight asymmetric neurogenesis defective (and) mutants. Through mapping-by-sequencing, genetic complementation and rescue experiments, we show that
and-6 is an allele of
hlh-2, a bHLH transcription factor that heterodimerizes with other bHLH transcription factors, including
hlh-14 and that
and-4 is an allele of
let-19, a member of the Mediator complex. 4D-lineage analysis of the C-lineage reveals that
hlh-2 and
let-19 mutants exhibit concomitant precocious division of the DVC neuroblast, loss of neuronal cell fate markers, loss of
hlh-14 expression and ectopic expression of a hypodermal marker. All of which are phenotypes shared with
hlh-14 mutants. We find that
let-19 acts during the division of Ca and Caa, and that
hlh-2 expression coincides with, and is dependent on, the activity of
let-19. These results demonstrate that the Mediator regulates the expression of
hlh-2 and
hlh-14 during asymmetric neurogenesis. We observe three successive unequal (in size) cell divisions leading up to the production of the DVC neuroblast. We find that
let-19 regulates the second of these divisions and in
let-19 mutants this division becomes symmetric with a concomitant loss of neuronal potential. The third unequal division is regulated by
hlh-14 but not
hlh-2 and again there is a concomitant loss of neuronal potential. These results suggest that asymmetric segregation of an unidentified neuronal determinant has a critical role in this lineage and that the Mediator, as well as proneural genes, regulate cell fate and cell size concomitantly. We are currently determining through manipulations of blastomere size if the unequal divisions are an input or output of fate.