Abstract

In both metazoan development and metastatic cancer, migrating cells must carry out a detailed, complex program of sensing cues, binding substrates, and moving their cytoskeletons. The linker cell in Caenorhabditis elegans males undergoes a stereotyped migration that guides gonad organogenesis, occurs with precise timing, and requires the nuclear hormone receptor NHR-67. To better understand how this occurs, we performed RNA-seq of individually staged and dissected linker cells, comparing transcriptomes from linker cells of third-stage (L3) larvae, fourth-stage (L4) larvae, and nhr-67-RNAi–treated L4 larvae. We observed expression of 8,000–10,000 genes in the linker cell, 22–25% of which were up- or down-regulated 20-fold during development by NHR-67. Of genes that we tested by RNAi, 22% (45 of 204) were required for normal shape and migration, suggesting that many NHR-67–dependent, linker cell-enriched genes play roles in this migration. One unexpected class of genes up-regulated by NHR-67 was tandem pore potassium channels, which are required for normal linker-cell migration. We also found phenotypes for genes with human orthologs but no previously described migratory function. Our results provide an extensive catalog of genes that act in a migrating cell, identify unique molecular functions involved in nematode cell migration, and suggest similar functions in humans.

Keywords

Amyloid (mycology)CascadeDiseaseAlzheimer's diseaseAmyloid βNeuroscienceBiologyMedicineChemistryInternal medicinePathology

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Publication Info

Year
1992
Type
review
Volume
256
Issue
5054
Pages
184-185
Citations
7153
Access
Closed

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John Hardy, Gerald A. Higgins (1992). Alzheimer's Disease: The Amyloid Cascade Hypothesis. Science , 256 (5054) , 184-185. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1566067

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DOI
10.1126/science.1566067