After cells undergo programmed cell death, their corpses are engulfed by neighboring cells. This engulfment process requires both the recognition and the subsequent phagocytosis of a dying cell by an engulfing cell. Mutations in at least six genes interfere with the engulfment process and result in cell corpses that persist throughout development We have cloned the engulfment gene
ced-5 and shown that it encodes a protein similar to the human protein DOCK180 . DOCK180 was isolated on the basis of its interaction with the SH3 motif of the adaptor protein CRK, which has been implicated in cell motility and cell movement through its interaction with cytoskeletal proteins (1). Recruitment of DOCK180 to the plasma membrane by the addition of a farnesylation site results in a change in cell morphology: 3T3 cells transfected with such a DOCK180 construct extend their cell surfaces and become flat and polygonal (1). This cell surface extension may be analogous to the extension of pseudopodia by an engulfing cell, suggesting that CED-5 may function like DOCK180 and re-organize the cytoskeleton of engulfing cells as they extend their membranes around dying cells. Supporting this model is the observation that
ced-5 mutants are abnormal in distal tip cell migration, which also requires an extension of membrane processes. A
ced-5 cDNA rescues the engulfment defect of
ced-5 animals when expressed under the control of heat-shock promoters in early embryos before cell deaths occur. Interestingly, transgenic animals heat shocked at larval stages in which embryonic corpses had persisted for days were also rescued, indicating that the engulfment machinery can be activated by induced expression of
ced-5 in
ced-5 mutants even after cells are long dead. When
ced-5 animals carrying heat-shock GFP constructs were heat shocked at such larval stages, no GFP expression was observed in the persistent embryonic corpses. This experiment suggests that the transcriptional or translational machinery may be inactive in persistent corpses. If so, the larval rescue of the Ced-5 phenotype presumably does not result from
ced-5 expression in the dying cell and thus suggests that
ced-5 functions in the engulfing cell. We have also cloned another engulfment gene,
ced-7, and shown that
ced-7 encodes a protein similar to ABC (ATP-Binding Cassette) transporters. CED-7 protein is localized to the plasma membrane and is widely expressed during embryogenesis by immunocytochemistry using Anti-CED-7 antibodies.
ced-7 may function in the translocation of molecule(s) needed for recognition between an engulfing and a dying cell or for adherence of cell surfaces between these cells during engulfment. (1) Hasegawa , H. et al. Mol. Cell. Biol. 16, 1770-1776, 1996