Stem cell maintenance is a critical process that when perturbed results in serious negative consequences in a variety of contexts from embryonic development to tumor formation. The importance of stem cell regulation has been widely recognized in the last decade, and although many signaling pathways have been associated with stem cell maintenance, much remains unknown. We have characterized FRK-1, a homologue of the mammalian Fer non-receptor tyrosine kinase, and found it to be required for differentiation and maintenance of epithelial cell types, including the stem cell-like seam cells of the hypodermis in Caenorhabditis elegans. FRK-1 is localized to the plasma membrane, where it stabilizes cellular adhesion complexes. In the absence of maternal and early zygotic FRK-1, hypodermal cells are specified but not fully differentiated indicating that FRK-1 is required for maintaining hypodermal differentiation in developing embryos. Furthermore, we have demonstrated a requirement for FRK-1 during endoderm proliferation, where in the absence of FRK-1, endoderm cells hyperproliferate via an ectopic Wnt signaling mechanism through the b-catenin homologue, HMP-2. More recently, we have characterized a genomic knockout of
frk-1 (
frk-1(
ok760)) which eliminates only zygotic FRK-1 expression and results in lethality at the L1 larval stage. In mutants homozygous for the
frk-1(
ok760) deletion we have observed an excess number of lateral hypodermal cells which appear to have lost the asymmetry in the stem cell-like divisions of the seam cell lineage. More specifically, our data shows a loss of seam cell specific markers, such as scm::gfp, as well as loss of seam-specific cuticular alae formation. Immunostaining the
frk-1(
ok760) mutants with the epithelial adherens junction marker, MH27, shows that the lateral hypodermal cells are smaller in size, similar to the anterior daughter of a normal asymmetric seam cell division. Furthermore, the lateral hypodermal cells appear to have differentiated as non-seam based on the presence of non-seam hypodermis markers such as
elt-3::gfp. We are currently investigating the mechanism by which the loss of FRK-1 causes this apparent cell fate switch and whether FRK-1 translocation to the nucleus during mitosis is required for the stem cell-like self-renewal exhibited by seam cells during post-embryonic development in C. elegans.