In Drosophila, nanos is required for primordial germ cells (PGCs) to differentiate into a functional germ line. Lack of NANOS function causes defects in germ cell migration, differentiation, and quiescence and ultimately leads to sterility in both males and females. Similarly, in mice a lack of nanos3 results in the complete loss of germ cells in both sexes (Tsuda et al. 2003) and functional loss of two of the three nanos genes in C. elegans,
nos1 and
nos2, also results in sterility (Subramaniam and Seydoux, 1999). It has therefore been proposed that nanos is a conserved master regulator of the germ cell fate. In the C. elegans early embryo, the chromatin in all cells contain the active chromatin mark, histone H3 methylated on lysine 4 (H3meK4). However upon their birth, the primordial germ cells Z2 and Z3 dramatically lose this mark. This loss of the active H3meK4 mark has been suggested to be part of a chromatin-based transcriptional repression mechanism. Remarkably, absence of the H3meK4 mark has been shown to be dependent upon nanos activity (Schaner et al. 2003). Thus it is possible that nanos may be partially affecting its role in maintaining the undifferentiated germ cell fate through a chromatin-based mechanism. We aim to explore this potential link by further characterizing the role of C. elegans nanos in germ cell fate. To this end, we are taking both forward and reverse genetic approaches as well as conducting ectopic expression studies.