» Articles » PMID: 14698436

Ectopic Expression of a Haemonchus Contortus GATA Transcription Factor in Caenorhabditis Elegans Reveals Conserved Function in Spite of Extensive Sequence Divergence

Overview
Date 2003 Dec 31
PMID 14698436
Citations 15
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Comparative analysis between Caenorhabditis elegans and other nematode species offers a powerful approach to study gene function. C. elegans also has great potential as a surrogate expression system to study the function of genes from parasitic nematode species where transgenic methodologies are unavailable. However there is little information on the extent to which the biology of C. elegans is conserved with other nematode species and very few parasitic nematode genes have yet been functionally expressed in C. elegans. We have identified and characterised a homologue of the C. elegans GATA transcription factor elt-2, a central regulator of endoderm development, from the parasitic nematode Haemonchus contortus. The H. contortus ELT-2 polypeptide is present in endoderm nuclei throughout embryonic and post-embryonic development, except for in the infective L3 stage, and our experiments reveal that the development of the H. contortus endodermal lineage is strikingly similar to that of C. elegans. Sequence conservation between the H. contortus and C. elegans ELT-2 polypeptides broadly reflects function since the major region of sequence identity corresponds to the DNA binding domain. However, the overall level of sequence identity is remarkably low with the only other major region of identity corresponding to an unusual zinc finger domain. In spite of this, ectopic expression of the H. contortus elt-2 gene in transgenic C. elegans is sufficient to activate a programme of endodermal differentiation demonstrating that function is highly conserved. This approach of ectopic expression using an inducible promoter provides an effective way in which to use C. elegans for the in vivo functional analysis of parasitic nematode genes.

Citing Articles

Evolutionary Change in Gut Specification in Centers on the GATA Factor ELT-3 in an Example of Developmental System Drift.

Broitman-Maduro G, Maduro M J Dev Biol. 2023; 11(3).

PMID: 37489333 PMC: 10366740. DOI: 10.3390/jdb11030032.


The GATA factor ELT-3 specifies endoderm in Caenorhabditis angaria in an ancestral gene network.

Broitman-Maduro G, Sun S, Kikuchi T, Maduro M Development. 2022; 149(21).

PMID: 36196618 PMC: 9720673. DOI: 10.1242/dev.200984.


Evolution of Developmental GATA Factors in Nematodes.

Eurmsirilerd E, Maduro M J Dev Biol. 2020; 8(4).

PMID: 33207804 PMC: 7712238. DOI: 10.3390/jdb8040027.


Evolutionary Dynamics of the SKN-1 → MED → END-1,3 Regulatory Gene Cascade in Endoderm Specification.

Maduro M G3 (Bethesda). 2019; 10(1):333-356.

PMID: 31740453 PMC: 6945043. DOI: 10.1534/g3.119.400724.


Probing and rearranging the transcription factor network controlling the endoderm.

Wiesenfahrt T, Nishimura E, Berg J, McGhee J Worm. 2016; 5(3):e1198869.

PMID: 27695655 PMC: 5022670. DOI: 10.1080/21624054.2016.1198869.