We are studying maternal-effect sterile (mes) mutants in an effort to understand maternal control of C. elegans germline development. Four genes,
mes-2,
mes-3,
mes-4, and
mes-6, all give a similar mutant phenotype: progeny of mes/mes mothers undergo apparently normal embryogenesis and develop into healthy appearing adults but fail to produce a functional germline. MES-2 and MES-6 are the C.elegans homologs of Enhancer of zeste and Extra sex combs, both members of the Polycomb group in Drosophila, and MES-3 is a novel protein.
mes-4 was mapped to a gap in cosmid coverage. Transformation rescue of
mes-4 mutants was accomplished by injecting DNA prepared from YAC Y2H9. A cDNA clone in Y. Kohara's library,
yk35f6, encodes one of the genes in this region. RNAi disruption of the function of
yk35f6 resulted in production of sterile progeny. The proof that
yk35f6 encodes part of
mes-4 came from sequencing the seven mutant alleles of
mes-4. Four alleles have single missense mutations, and three alleles have small deletions. Northern blot analysis showed that
mes-4 RNA is essentially restricted to the germline. The predicted MES-4 protein contains three zinc fingers (one RING finger and two PHD fingers), a 150 aa motif known as the SET domain, and a nuclear localization signal. RING fingers and PHD fingers are found in many proteins with diverse functions and are thought to mediate protein-protein interactions. The SET domain is common to chromatin-binding proteins. A SET domain is also found in MES-2. MES-4 shows the highest degree of overall similarity to NSD1 and ASH1. Murine NSD1 has five PHD-type zinc fingers, a SET domain, and two distinct nuclear receptor interaction domains not found in MES-4. The function of NSD1 is not known. ASH1 is a member of the trithorax group in Drosophila. It contains a PHD-type zinc finger and a SET domain. Trithorax group proteins are thought to be responsible for long-term maintenance of transcriptional activation of specific genes; they also participate in transcriptional repression of some genes as well. Current thinking is that Polycomb and Trithorax group proteins form multimeric protein complexes and control chromatin structure and gene expression at specific sites on chromosomes. We hypothesize that MES-4 forms complexes with other MES proteins and modifies chromatin structure in the germline of C.elegans.