Bodywall muscles are derived from four of the embryonic founder cells as well as the postembryonic M blast cell. We are studying patterning of both the embryonic and postembryonic muscles in order to understand how myogenic cell fates are specified during development. As an entry point to study muscle patterning during embryonic development, we characterized enhancer elements from the
hlh-1 regulatory region that are able to drive reporter expression in muscle precursors of the MS, D and C lineages. Analyses of these elements suggested regulatory roles of the Hox genes and the
hlh-1 gene itself. These analyses also suggested regulatory mechanisms involving unknown bZIP, bHLH and novel transcription factors. We are currently in the process of genetically identifying these factors. The postembryonic M lineage provides an alternative model to study myogenic fate specification. The M lineage gives rise to 14 bodywall muscles, 2 coelomocytes and 16 sex muscles. A number of genes had previously been identified to function in patterning the M lineage, including the Hox gene
mab-5 and the bHLH transcription factor twist (1, 2, 3). The role of the Hox factors in patterning the M lineage has been something of a mystery:
mab-5 is expressed during the entire M lineage, but
mab-5 mutants cause only limited lineage transformation. We will describe a series of experiments indicating a more central role for the Hox genes in activating twist and specifying the M lineage. We found that
lin-39 mab-5 double mutants fail to activate twist and completely lack products of the M lineage. Expression (either ectopic or in a normal pattern) of either Hox gene is sufficient to activate twist expression. However, twist activation is not sufficient for specification of the M lineage. Current efforts are directed towards identification of other factors involved in specifying the M lineage. 1. Kenyon, C. (1986), Cell 46: 477-487 2. Harfe B. D., Vaz Gomes A., Kenyon C., Liu J., Krause M., Fire A. (1998) Genes & Dev. 12: 2623-2635 3. A. Corsi, S. Kostas, E. Jorgensen, A. Fire, and M. Krause (poster)