Early embryogenesis in Caenorhabditis elegans is regulated by maternal gene products called polarity mediators. The maternal gene product SPN-4 is a translational regulator with an RNP-type RNA-binding domain and is involved in centrosome rotation during asymmetric cell division in early embryos. In the previous study, multi-omics, transcriptomics, and proteomics revealed that 52 genes were regulated by SPN-4. Some of the identified genes encoded transcription factors. Therefore, in order to clarify the comprehensive functions of SPN-4, it is necessary to identify the SPN-4 gene cascade. SPN-4 gene cascade was constructed by considering genes for which mRNA level fluctuation was caused by transcription factors, which are translationally regulated by SPN-4. We identified such genes by comparative transcriptome analysis between wild-type and ?
spn-4 (
tm291) mutant. SPN-4 downstream transcription factors were identified from the genes that were translationally regulated, i.e., genes for which mRNA levels were not affected by the absence of
spn-4 function and by considering the corresponding gene ontology information (GO: 0006351 transcription, DNA-templated). Among them, the genes of transcription factor candidates, which were translationally regulated by SPN-4, were found by excluding those with an expression time different from that of SPN-4 and its products. For these transcription factors, the downstream genes listed in the nematode gene database (WormBase) and with mRNA level unaltered by the absence of
spn-4 function were identified and defined as the genes being indirectly and transcriptionally regulated indirectly by SPN-4. Furthermore, these genes, which were regulated by the transcription factors included in downstream genes, which were extracted by interaction and expression timing. Then, we built the gene cascade of
spn-4. Our results suggest that the
spn-4 gene cascade may be responsible for the development of germline and feeding organs such as pharynx and intestine during embryo development of C. elegans.