Post-embryonic animal development is often contingent on environmental cues, such as the availability of nutrients and resources. The C. elegans nuclear hormone receptor DAF-12 integrates environmental information to mediate the decision between reproductive development or the dauer diapause, a long lived stress resistant stage. DAF-12 also works in the heterochronic pathway in several tissues. In particular,
daf-12 mutants perturb L3 and later stage programs in the seam cells, a phenotype shared with mutants of the
let-7-family of microRNAs,
mir-48,
mir-84, and
mir-241. Individual mutants exhibit impenetrant phenotypes, whereas
daf-12;miR doubles leads to an enhancement. Notably, we have shown that DAF-12 directly activates
let-7-family miR transcription in response to its identified ligand, "dafachronic acid" (see abstract by Bethke et al). These observations together imply that DAF-12 activates the miRs during reproductive development, and represses them during dauer formation, connecting environmental input to the heterochronic pathway. Interestingly, these microRNAs also influence dauer formation itself. The miR triple deletion has a Daf-c phenotype, which is readily suppressed by
daf-12 loss of function. This observation suggests that in addition to being transcriptional targets, miRs could also feedback regulate
daf-12 through its 3 UTR. In addition, a number of other dauer regulators contain potential
let-7-family miRNA binding sites, suggesting they too could be direct targets. In this work we look at two predicted 3 UTR targets for repression, DAF-12 and the FOXO transcription factor DAF-16. To test this hypothesis, we quantified the degree of repression: a YFP construct with the
daf-12 promotor and
unc-54-3''UTR showed high expression levels. By contrast, the expression level of the chromophore is strongly repressed when the
unc-54-3''UTR is exchanged for either the
daf-12 or the
daf-16 3''UTR, indicating a tight repression of translation or decrease in post transcriptional mRNA stability. We are currently conducting genetic experiments to find out the exact identity of the suppressing miRNAs and their major upstream activators, as well as Q-PCR experiments to look at mRNA stability of the miR-targets.