We have isolated a maternal effect lethal mutant we call
cen-1(
or430ts), for centrosomal defective, in a screen for temperature-sensitive embryonic-lethal cell division mutants. At the non-permissive temperature pronuclear migration, rotation and movement of the centrosomal/nuclear complex and spindle formation are all severely, although variably, affected in single-celled
cen-1 mutant embryos. Indirect immunofluorescence analysis of fixed embryos and time-lapse spinning disk confocal microscopy using a beta-tubulin::GFP reporter reveal that astral microtubules associated with the sperm pronucleus are far less robust than in wild-type, although free cytoplasmic microtubules are present in early pronuclear stage embryos. This suggests that the primary defect is not in microtubule assembly. Instead, these defects in microtubule accumulation probably result from abnormal centrosomes: SPD-5, AIR-1, ZYG-9 and gamma-tubulin, all known components of centrosomes (D. Hamil, personal communication, 1,2,3,4), fail to accumulate to normal levels in
cen-1 mutant embryos.
cen-1 therefore appears to be an important factor required for centrosomal maturation. Consistent with this conclusion,
cen-1 mutant embryos share other phenotypes caused by depletion of centrosomal proteins. These include collapse of centrosomes towards one another upon nuclear envelope breakdown, as reported for
air-1 depleted embryos (1), and occasional separation of centrosomes from the male pronucleus, as seen in
tbg-1 depleted embryos (4). We are currently positionally cloning
cen-1, which maps to the right arm of LGIV, at approximately 5.57 map units. References: