CGC Bibliography Paper 5081
Evolution of germ-line signals that regulate growth and aging in nematodes.
Patel MN,
Knight CG,
Karageorgi C,
Leroi AM
- Medline:
- 11805331
- Citation:
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 99: 769-774 2002
- Type:
- ARTICLE
- Genes:
- daf-16 dbl-1 fer-6
- Abstract:
- We show that a signal from the germ line represses growth in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Laser-microbeam ablation of cells that give rise to the germ line causes adults to become giant. Ablation of these cells in self-sterile mutant worms also causes gigantism, suggesting that the germ line represses growth because it is the source of a growth-antagonizing signal rather than because of a sink of resources required for reproduction. The C. elegans germ line also emits a signal that represses longevity. This longevity-repressing signal requires the activity of DAF-16, a fork-head/winged-helix transcription factor, but we find that that the growth-repressing signal does not. The growth-repressing signal also does not require the activity of DBL-1, a transforming growth factor P-related protein that promotes growth in worms. By ablating the germ-line precursors of other species of free-living nematodes, we also found that both the growth-repressing and longevity-repressing signals are evolutionarily variable. Some species have both signals; others have just one or the other. We suggest that variation in germ-line signaling contributes to body size and life-history diversity in the nematodes.