During organogenesis of the C. elegans intestine, gut cells polarize into epithelial cells exhibiting cell-cell junctions and apical and basolateral membrane domains. Concomitant with this, nuclei migrate and localize near the apical cell surface, while other organelles including gut granules, yolk platelets, lipid droplets, the Golgi, and mitochondria become basally polarized. By analyzing
unc-83(-) mutants, which disrupt the apical migration of nuclei, we find that nuclear exclusion leads to the basal positioning of all of these organelles except for lipid droplets, whose polarization is independent of nuclear positioning. Organelles composing the conventional endosomal pathway, including early endosomes, late endosomes, and lysosomes are polarized apically at the same time, but independent of, nuclear migration. Interestingly, endosomal organelles become positioned near the midline of the gut, prior to the epithelial polarization of intestinal cells. The Par polarity pathway controls the asymmetric distribution of organelles in the 1-cell C. elegans embryo and the epithelial polarization of intestinal cells. However,
par-3(-) mutants do not disrupt the apical polarization of nuclei and endosomes, or the basal positioning of gut granules. Rab GTPases can direct organelle positioning, leading us to examine organelle polarization in
wht-2(-) mutants, which generate gut granules lacking the GLO-1 Rab. In
wht-2(-), gut granules become apically polarized, while the positioning of other organelles remains unchanged. Ectopic expression of GLO-1 suppresses gut granule mispositioning. The apically mislocalized gut granules in
wht-2(-) mutants do not obviously take on characteristics of conventional endosomes. WHT-2 is an ABCG transporter, and we present the results of studies analyzing how point mutations disrupting its ATPase and coupled membrane transport activity impact gut granule polarization.