PAR-1 protein is required for establishing polarity during early embryogenesis in the nematode C.elegans. Mutants in
par-1 have an abnormal first cell division and patterning defects. PAR-1 protein is localized asymmetrically, to the posterior periphery of the one cell embryo. The conserved C-terminal domain of PAR-1 was found to interact specifically, both in vivo and in vitro, with NMY-2, a non-muscle myosin type II heavy chain (Guo and Kemphues 1996). RNA interference experiments suggest that removing NMY-2 from the early embryo results in a mislocalization of the PAR-1 protein. At present, the role of the interaction between PAR-1 and NMY-2 in establishing polarity in the early embryo is still unclear. To understand better the role of this interaction in vivo, I will generate mutant PAR-1 proteins that disrupt binding to NMY-2 in vitro and test these proteins for rescue with germline transformation. PAR-1 is predicted to be a serine/threonine protein kinase (Guo and Kemphues 1995). Two
par-1 alleles contain mutations in conserved residues of the kinase domain. These mutants suggest that PAR-1 kinase activity is also required to correctly establish polarity. In order to understand the role that PAR-1 plays in the early cell divisions, it will be necessary to identify the substrates for this kinase activity in vivo. To do this, I am conducting a screen for PAR-1 substrates. Guo, S. and K.J. Kemphues. 1995. Cell 81:611-620. Guo, S. and K.J. Kemphues. 1996. Nature 382:455-258.