[
1989]
Classical embryological studies of nematodes, primarily by Van Beneden and Boveri near the turn of the century, have made lasting contributions to our understanding of embryonic development (1). However, during most of this century, nematodes have been eclipsed as a model system for embryology by organisms with more tractable embryos such as sea urchins, insects, amphibians, birds, and mice. Two features of the free-living soil nematode Caenorhabditis elegans have returned nematodes to a prominent place in embryological investigations: its suitability for genetic analysis and its invariant and completely described cell lineage. These two features, combined with technological advances in microscopy and molecular biology, are providing the opportunity to combine experimental embryology with genetic and molecular analyses of embryonic development at the level of individual cells in a single organism. This chapter focuses on efforts to understand the molecular and cellular events of early development in C. elegans with particular emphasis on events relating to the determination of embryonic cell fates. Extensive coverage of the various contributions that the study of Caenorhabditis has made to our knowledge of developmental biology can be found in ref. 2.