Abstract
We describe interactions between maternal-effect lethal mutations in four genes of Caenorhabditis elegans whose products appear to be involved in the meiotic and mitotic divisions of the one-cell embryo. Mitosis is disrupted by two dominant temperature-sensitive gain-of-function maternal-effect lethal mutations, mei-1(ct46) and mel-26(ct61), and by recessive loss-of-function maternal-effect lethal mutations of zyg-9. The phenotypic defects resulting from these mutations are similar. Doubly mutant combinations show a strong enhancement of the maternal-effect lethality under semipermissive conditions, suggesting that the mutant gene products interact. We isolated 15 dominant suppressors of the gain-of-function mutation mei-1(ct46). Thirteen of these suppressors are apparently intragenic, but 11 of them suppress in trans as well as cis. Two extragenic suppressors define a new gene, mei-2. The suppressor mutations in these two genes also result in recessive maternal-effect lethality, but with meiotic rather than mitotic defects. Surprisingly, most of these suppressors are also able to suppress mel-26(ct61) in addition to mei-1(ct46). The products of the four genes mei-1, mei-2, zyg-9 and mel-26 could be responsible for some of the specialized features that distinguish the meiotic from the mitotic divisions in the one-cell embryo.
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CITATION STYLE
Mains, P. E., Kemphues, K. J., Sprunger, S. A., Sulston, I. A., & Wood, W. B. (1990). Mutations affecting the meiotic and mitotic divisions of the early Caenorhabditis elegans embryo. Genetics, 126(3), 593–605. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/126.3.593
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