Cell-specific effects of the sole C. elegans Daughterless/E protein homolog, HLH-2, on nervous system development

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Abstract

Are there common mechanisms of neurogenesis used throughout an entire nervous system? We explored to what extent canonical proneural class I/II bHLH complexes are responsible for neurogenesis throughout the entire Caenorhabditis elegans nervous system. Distinct, lineage-specific proneural class II bHLH factors are generally thought to operate via interaction with a common, class I bHLH subunit, encoded by Daughterless in flies, the E proteins in vertebrates and HLH-2 in C. elegans. To eliminate function of all proneuronal class I/II bHLH complexes, we therefore genetically removed maternal and zygotic hlh-2 gene activity. We observed broad effects on neurogenesis, but still detected normal neurogenesis in many distinct neuron-producing lineages of the central and peripheral nervous system. Moreover, we found that hlh-2 selectively affects some aspects of neuron differentiation while leaving others unaffected. Although our studies confirm the function of proneuronal class I/II bHLH complexes in many different lineages throughout a nervous system, we conclude that their function is not universal, but rather restricted by lineage, cell type and components of differentiation programs affected.

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Masoudi, N., Schnabel, R., Yemini, E., Leyva-Dıáz, E., & Hobert, O. (2023). Cell-specific effects of the sole C. elegans Daughterless/E protein homolog, HLH-2, on nervous system development. Development (Cambridge), 150(1). https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.201366

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