We study the genetic regulation and cell biological processes that underlie biological tube formation (tubulogenesis) in C. elegans and during angiogenesis; a process of blood vessel formation. To this end, we study the excretory canal (ExCa) a unicellular tube that elongates throughout the worms' entire body. Some genes that regulate ExCa tubulogenesis are also involved in angiogenesis (see also Socovich abstract). One example is the gene
exc-4, which encodes a chloride intracellular channel (CLIC). The first mutants in this gene were retrieved in a pioneering screen conducted by Buechner et al., looking for animals with cystic excretory canals (the exc screen), and
exc-4 was later cloned by the Hobert Lab. Subsequently, work from our collaborator, Dr. Jan Kitajewski, and his lab implicated two vertebrate orthologs, CLIC1 and CLIC4, in angiogenesis in vitro (using cultured human umbilical vascular endothelial cells, or HUVEC) and in vivo (in mice). In collaboration with the Kitajewski Lab we have now shown that EXC-4 in the worm, and CLIC1 and CLIC4 in endothelial cells, modulate signaling pathways that act via heterotrimeric G proteins (G?/ beta /?) and the small GTPases Rho and Rac. This suggests that EXC-4/CLIC proteins are conserved regulators of Rho/Rac signaling (see also Arena abstract). We want to use genetic and expression analyses to define how EXC-4 and G?/ beta /?-Rho/Rac signaling components interact to achieve this regulation. Genetic analysis of these players is confounded by lethality caused by null mutations in some of them (e.g.
gsa-1/ G?s,
gpb-1/G beta ,
gpc-2/G?,
rho-1/Rho and
ced-10/Rac) or potential redundancy among others (e.g. between different G?/ beta /?-encoding genes, or between the two Rac homologs
ced-10 and
mig-2). To circumvent these issues, we are generating a toolkit to activate or deplete G?/ beta /?, Rho and Rac homologs specifically in the ExCa, as well as to visualize protein localization of these components in this cell. Our goal is to combine these tools with
exc-4/CLIC mutants to define the conserved mechanisms by which EXC-4/CLIC regulates G?/ beta /?-Rho/Rac signaling.