[
WormBook,
2007]
The C. elegans foregut (pharynx) has emerged as a powerful system to study organ formation during embryogenesis. Here I review recent advances regarding cell-fate specification and epithelial morphogenesis during pharynx development. Maternally-supplied gene products function prior to gastrulation to establish pluripotent blastomeres. As gastrulation gets under way, pharyngeal precursors become committed to pharyngeal fate in a process that requires PHA-4 /FoxA and the Tbox transcription factors TBX-2 , TBX-35 , TBX-37 and TBX-38 . Subsequent waves of gene expression depend on the affinity of PHA-4 for its target promoters, coupled with combinatorial strategies such as feed-forward and positive-feedback loops. During later embryogenesis, pharyngeal precursors undergo reorganization and a mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition to form the linear gut tube. Surprisingly, epithelium formation does not depend on cadherins, catenins or integrins. Rather, the kinesin ZEN-4 /MKLP1 and CYK-4 /RhoGAP are critical to establish the apical domain during epithelial polarization. Finally, I discuss similarities and differences between the nematode pharynx and the vertebrate heart.
[
1985]
Myosins from slime molds to brain cells show a remarkable commonality of general molecular properties. These characteristics include two globular domains or heads that contain ATPase and actin-binding sites and the fibrous, coiled-coil a-helical rod that interacts with other molecules in assembly. Two heavy chains (m.w. 200,000) contribute to both heads, whereas two kinds of light chains bind to each head. In this paper, we consider striated muscles and their myosins. The phylogenetically distant nematode body-wall muscles and rabbit fast skeletal muscles produce myosin heavy chains, with about 47% of the amino acid sequences in the heads and 37% of the amino acids in the rod being identical (Karn et al. 1984). Myosin heavy chains are therefore highly conserved proteins. Contrasting with the phylogenetic conservation of myosin structure and sequence is the diversity of supramolecular arrangements of myosin assemblies in striated muscles, the so-called thick filaments. The lengths of thick filaments range from 1.55 um in vertebrates, 2-4 um in insect flight muscles, 10 um in the nematode to 40 um in certain mollusks. The average diameters of these filaments range from about 15 nm in vertebrates, 20 nm in insects, 25 nm in nematodes to 50-100 nm in some molluscan muscles. The surface arrangements of the myosin heads also vary in these different species. The lattice arrangements between thick filaments and the interdigitating, actin-containing thin filaments differ in terms of symmetry and thick:thin stoichiometry between these muscles. It appears likely that other protein components of these muscles interact with the very similar myosins to produce this structural diversity. The relatively subtle differences between myosin isoforms may also be important in these interactions. We define isoform in the case of myosin, for example, as a protein that is defined as a myosin by biochemical criteria but that can be distinguished on the basis of intrinsic molecular structure from another myosin within the same organism. In this paper, we describe experiments suggesting that two genetically different isoforms of myosin play distinct roles in concert with other proteins during the assembly of thick filaments in