Upon their specification, the two primordial germ cells (PGCs) in C. elegans, Z2 and Z3, rapidly lose the euchromatic mark di-methylation of histone H3 on lysine 4 (H3K4me2). This epigenetic erasure has been suggested to contribute to embryonic germline maintenance through chromatin-based transcriptional repression. The mammalian protein LSD1 has been shown to demethylate H3K4me2. Here we show that mutants in the C. elegans LSD1 ortholog,
spr-5, exhibit progressive sterility over many generations due to defects in oogenesis and a delay in spermatogenesis. The progressive sterility correlates with increased retention of H3K4me2 in the PGCs, suggesting that SPR-5 mediated H3K4 demethylation is essential for germline immortality. In addition, microarray analysis and quantitative rt-PCR in
spr-5 mutants demonstrate that the progressive sterility corresponds with a heritable build up of expression in spermatogenesis genes. Taken together, these results suggest that failure to erase H3K4me2 in the germline cycle causes a progressive failure of epigenetic erasure in the PGCs which leads to inappropriate expression of spermatogenesis genes and increasing sterility. Therefore, we propose that H3K4me2 can serve as an epigenetic memory and that LSD1 demethylases play an important role in the reprogramming of this memory in the germline, preventing inappropriate epigenetic information from being propagated from one generation to the next.