ATX-2, a conserved RNA binding protein, is the C. elegans ortholog of the human RNA binding protein Ataxin-2. Loss of Ataxin-2 leads to the late-onset neurodegenerative disease spinocerebellar ataxia
type-2 (SCA2) and is associated with an increased risk for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). To define the cellular role of ATX-2, we sought to determine the ultrastructure of ATX-2-depleted embryos and adults. ATX-2 is necessary for embryonic patterning in C. elegans (Kiehl et al., 2000) and recent work from the Skop and Song labs has shown cell division defects in
atx-2 mutants (Stubenvoll et al., 2016; Gnazzo et al., 2016). To examine the cellular defects in the early embryo, we characterized
atx-2 ts mutant animals (WM210 (
atx-2(
ne4297));(Gnazzo et al., 2016)) at high resolution. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of ultra-thin sections revealed that ATX-2-depleted animals exhibit fertilization and egg-laying defects. Both unfertilized oocytes and defective embryos are present in the uterus of ATX-2 depleted animals. Mutant embryos also exhibit defects in nuclear division, in which daughter cells are multinucleated. Ataxin-2 localizes to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in humans (van de Loo et al., 2009), yet the dynamics of this association during cell division are unclear. Preliminary data from the Skop lab suggests a role for ATX-2 in maintaining proper ER morphology, yet the ultrastructure was unknown. Using TEM of ultra-thin sections, we found that ATX-2 depleted embryos have fragmented rough ER, suggesting that ATX-2 is necessary for maintaining proper rough ER morphology during mitosis. Given the human phenotypes, ultrastructural studies of ER morphology in neurons and glia of ATX-2-depleted adult animals is currently underway. This research is supported by an NSF grant MCB-1158003 (Skop Lab) and an NIH grant OD010943 (Hall Lab).