The NSM cells of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans differentiate into serotonergic neurons, while their sisters, the NSM sister cells, undergo programmed cell death during embryogenesis. The programmed death of the NSM sister cells is dependent on the cell-death activator EGL-1, a BH3-only protein required for programmed cell death in C. elegans, and can be prevented by a gain-of-function (gf) mutation in the cell-death specification gene ces-1, which encodes a Snail-like DNA-binding protein. Here, we show that the genes hlh-2 and hlh-3, which encode a Daughterless-like and an Achaete-scute-like bHLH protein, respectively, are required to kill the NSM sister cells. A heterodimer composed of HLH-2 and HLH-3, HLH-2/HLH-3, binds to Snail-binding sites/E-boxes in a cis-regulatory region of the egl-1 locus in vitro that is required for the death of the NSM sister cells in vivo. Hence, we propose that HLH-2/HLH-3 is a direct,cell-type specific activator of egl-1 transcription. Furthermore, the Snail-like CES-1 protein can block the death of the NSM sister cells by acting through the same Snail-binding sites/E-boxes in the egl-1 locus. In ces-1(gf) animals, CES-1 might therefore prevent the death of the NSM sister cells by successfully competing with HLH-2/HLH-3 for binding to the egl-1 locus.
The Snail-like CES-1 protein of C. elegans can block the expression of theBH3-only cell-death activator gene egl-1 by antagonizing the function of bHLH proteins Available to Purchase
These authors contributed equally to this work
Present address: Dartmouth Medical School, Department of Genetics, 7400 Remsen, Hanover, NH 03755-3837, USA
Marion Thellmann, Julia Hatzold, Barbara Conradt; The Snail-like CES-1 protein of C. elegans can block the expression of theBH3-only cell-death activator gene egl-1 by antagonizing the function of bHLH proteins. Development 1 September 2003; 130 (17): 4057–4071. doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.00597
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