The C. elegans zygote is protected by a trilaminar eggshell, consisting of vitelline, chitin and proteoglycan layers, which provides mechanical rigidity and blocks polyspermy. At anaphase I of meiosis, cortical granule exocytosis coincides with the formation of an inner eggshell layer composed of CPG-1/2 proteoglycans. Subsequently, a permeability barrier is established that blocks the passage of small molecules. We show that the C. elegans PTR-2 (Patched-related) protein, a homologue of the vertebrate Hedgehog receptor Patched, is required for the formation of an intact permeability barrier. 100% of
ptr-2(RNAi) treated embryos arrest at the 100 cell-stage; by contrast,
ptr-2(
ok1338) homozygotes are maternally rescued, but arrest at the hatching/L1 stage because of zygotic
ptr-2 absence.
ptr-2(RNAi) arrested eggs are highly permeable to Hoechst 33258, exhibit osmotic sensitivity, and often display cytokinesis defects, all of which are indicative of eggshell and/or permeability barrier defects. We have rescued
ptr-2 mutants with a chromosomally integrated PTR-2::mRFP reporter and have found that PTR-2 is a cortical granule marker. During exocytosis, PTR-2::mRFP vesicles show significant co-localisation with caveolin-1 (CAV-1) vesicles. Mass spectrometry followed by co-immunoprecipitation provides further evidence that PTR-2 is associated with a CAV-1 complex. We have also observed that
ptr-2 depletion leads to aberrant membrane trafficking, which is highlighted by the accumulation/aggregation of the membrane lipid phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) marker phospholipase C-
d1 (PH-PLC
(d1)). Taken together, our data indicate that
ptr-2 is likely involved in the synthesis or regulation of cortical granule cargo(s), which is delivered at anaphase I; alternatively,
ptr-2 might have a role in establishing the eggshell permeability barrier after anaphase I. We are also examining the importance of the RND permease domain and the sterol sensing domain in mediating PTR-2 function. Finally, we will report on the identification of other proteins that appear to co-localise with PTR-2.