Proper eukaryotic development requires the precise regulation of post-translational modifiers such as RNA-binding proteins. Defects in RNA-binding proteins or their target sites can disrupt the cell-cycle, resulting in tumor formation, a hallmark of cancer. In C. elegans, members of the conserved PUF (Pumilio and FBF) protein family regulate germline proliferation. PUF-8 and FBF (two paralogs
fbf-1 and
fbf-2) function in the mitotic region of the germ line yet have distinct biological functions. Both recognize RNA via eight modular repeat units. However, the length of the consensus binding motif differs. PUF-8 recognizes an eight nucleotide element (PBE) while FBF-2 binds to a nine nucleotide consensus motif (FBE). Previous work has shown that the fifth repeat of FBF-2 is essential for flipping out the sixth base of the mRNA strand. We hypothesized that alterations to this repeat may switch its binding preference from FBE to PBE. This mutant enables us to examine if specificity is a driving force for establishment of parallel regulatory functions. To test this, we will examine if this mutation in FBF-2 rescues the mitotic tumor phenotype associated with loss of
puf-8 function in the distal region of the germline. We used an in vitro molecular genetics screen to identify mutations in the fifth repeat of FBF-2 that resulted in a switch for binding from FBE to PBE. After screening ~5,000 unique transformants, one provided the key molecular phenotype. Mutations with confirmed FBE to PBE binding switches, are being introduced in the endogenous C. elegans
fbf-2 locus using CRISPR/Cas9. Phenotypic and genetic characterization of these mutants will reveal key mechanistic features required for PUF regulatory function.