The activity patterns of somatic transgenes provide a means to study gene silencing in C. elegans . Transgene silencing phenomena have been observed in a variety of organisms, and are often associated with repetitive contexts. In both the soma and germline of C. elegans , certain transgenes present in long tandem arrays are silenced or show mosaic expression (i.e. many cells contain the transgene but lack detectable expression). Silencing can be relieved when the constructs are in a non-repetitive context: in F1 assays or imbedded in arrays with excess of genomic carrier DNA (1). In order to identify trans-acting factors that modulate the levels of context-dependent gene silencing, we have carried out a number of genetic screens. In one screen, we looked for a reduction of expression from a uniformly expressing bodywall muscle transgene. Three alleles of a single chromosomal gene were isolated. Mutations in this gene, designated tandem-array-modifier-1 (
tam-1 ) have similar effects on a number of different reporter transgenes with diverse expression patterns. Other
tam-1 mutations were picked up independently in a screen by Liu, Chang, and Sternberg (2,3). The TAM-1 protein is nuclear and contains two cysteine-rich domains, a "RING" finger and a "B-box". Although the molecular function of these domains are unknown, roles in context-dependent gene expression have been suggested for several RING-finger proteins. One biological role of context-dependent silencing is suggested by the unexpected observation that
tam-1 behaves as a class B SynMuv gene. The inhibition of Ras signalling during vulval induction is controlled by two redundant pathways, the class A and class B SynMuv genes. Further investigating this correlation, we see a silenced-transgene phenotype in non-vulval tissue in several other class B mutants, suggesting that the role of class B genes is more widespread than just in the inhibition of Ras signalling during vulval development. Our present studies are focused on understanding the connection between repetitive contexts and gene silencing and on the role of
tam-1 in these processes. 1 Kelly et al Genetics 46: 227, 2 Chang et al 1997 C. elegans Meeting: 619, 3 Liu, J. CalTech Thesis (1998)