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CC – BIOLOGY KILLIAN BY440 STEM CELL BIOLOGY - C. elegans Germline Stem Cells Lab One of the best described stem cell niches, both molecularly as well as ultrastructurally, is the germline stem cell niche in the C. elegans gonad. The niche is created by the distal tip cell (DTC), a somatic cell that is shaped somewhat like an octopus with a cell body at the distal end of the gonad tube and with cytoplasmic projections that extend like arms around the germline stem cells. The molecular interaction between the DTC and the germ cells is a Notch signaling mechanism where the DTC produces a membrane-bound ligand called LAG-2 that signals through the GLP-1/Notch transmembrane receptor on the germ cells. Activation of this pathway promotes mitotic proliferation of germline stem cells and inhibits the meiotic differentiation pathway. Cells that are not in contact with the DTC enter into meiosis and differentiate into sperm or oocytes. Other somatic cells such as the sheath cells are involved in signaling to the meiotic cells to differentiate and contractile sheath cells are involved in oocyte ovulation. C. elegans Gonad The DTC and germline stem cells by SEM. (Hall et al., 1999; Dev Biol). The Germ Line The Somatic Gonad Goal: The goal of this lab is to use differential interference contrast and fluorescence microscopy to investigate the stem cell niche in C. elegans and to observe the phenotype caused by various mutations that disrupt molecular pathways that influence germline development in the worm. You will receive several mutations labeled A, B, C… and you will attempt to determine the identity of the mutations based on descriptions of the mutant phenotypes from published papers and from descriptions on www.wormbase.org - a ridiculously fabulous database of C. elegans genetics. GFP-labeled DTC To observe the niche-providing DTC it has been labeled with GFP. The lag-2 gene is expressed specifically in the DTC and thus the lag-2 promoter, when fused to the GFP coding sequence, will drive GFP expression in the DTC allowing it to be observed in living animals with fluorescence microcopy. This transgene is described as Plag-2::GFP. In addition to the DTC, the somatic gonad sheath cells that line the gonad tube are also labeled with GFP using the lim-7 promoter that is expressed in the sheath cells. DTC Sheath CC – BIOLOGY KILLIAN BY440 STEM CELL BIOLOGY - Preparing Slides for Observation of DTC GFP Expression 1. Prepare a slide for mounting worms (see figure on the right). Line up one slide between 2 other slides that have a piece of lab tape running along them. Add a very small drop of molten 2% agarose onto the middle slide and then quickly place another slide on top of it but perpendicular and press down on it lightly with a finger. The agarose drop will flatten into a pad roughly the thickness of the tape. It will polymerize in a few seconds and you can slide the two slides apart and the pad will stick to one or the other. 2. Pipette 5 microliters of the 800uM levamisole solution onto the agarose pad. 3. Pick several worms (strain GC678) from the Petri plate using a platinum wire (“worm pick”) and place them in the drop of levamisole. 4. Place a cover slip on the worms and label the slide and you are ready to image the worms. DAPI Staining for Germ Cell Nuclear Morphology 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) is a fluorescent stain that passes through cell membranes and binds strongly to A-T rich regions in DNA. Thus, DAPI staining is a great way to visualize cell nuclei and nuclear morphology in intact specimens. DAPI staining C. elegans is extremely easy and reveals a great deal about the germ cells – whether they are germline stem cells, transitioning into meiosis, or in one of several various stages of meiosis I or II. See the figure of a DAPI-stained gonad below. Germline Stem Cells Meiotic Transition (crescent shaped) Meiotic Pachytene Sperm (tiny dots with compacted DNA) Oocytes (you can see all 6 chromosomes) CC – BIOLOGY KILLIAN BY440 STEM CELL BIOLOGY - DAPI Staining Protocol 1. For each strain, pipette 1.5ml of water directly onto the Petri plate and gently rock back and forth to get the worms off the surface of the plate and into the water. Use the dissecting scope to see that they are swimming or thrashing about in the water. 2. Use a pipette and collect the water and worms and add to a 1.5ml centrifuge tube. Get as much as you can and if the tube is not full, add fresh water to fill it. 3. Spin the worms down in the tabletop centrifuge at full speed for 1 minute. Believe it or not, the worms are fine even at high speeds. 4. Carefully remove the supernatant with a pipette – be sure not to suck up the worms. There should be a little water left in the bottom with many worms thrashing about. Use the dissecting scope to be sure that this is the case. 5. Fill the tube with 95% ethanol. This will desiccate and “fix” the worms. Let the tube sit upright in a tube rack for about 10 minutes. During this time the worms will slowly settle to the bottom. We will not centrifuge them again because they are too fragile in ethanol so they must settle to the bottom with gravity. 6. Remove the ethanol with a pipette and discard leaving the worms and as little ethanol as possible. 7. Add 10 microliters of DAPI to the tube. Pipette the DAPI slowly; it is in a glycerol-mounting medium and thus is very thick or viscous. 8. Prepare a slide for mounting worms (see above). 9. Pipette 5 microliters of the DAPI + worms directly onto the agarose pad and cover with a cover slip. Label the slide. The worms are now ready to image. The Mutants I have gathered several mutants that display defects in germline stem cell development/differentiation of meiotic cells. Each of the mutants is described below but you will receive plates labeled A, B, C… and your job will be to discern which plate corresponds to which mutation based on the phenotype (see questions on next page). glp-1(null) Fails to maintain germline stem cells and thus is sterile with no apparent germ cells at all or just a few fully differentiated sperm at most. glp-1(ts) This mutation is similar to the null mutation but is temperature sensitive; at lower temperatures (permissive) the allele behaves as WT and the worms are normal but at higher temperatures (restrictive) the allele behaves as a null and all germ cells enter into meiosis. The phenotype will vary depending on the temperature and when the worms are shifted from the permissive to restrictive temperature. glp-1(oz112) This gain-of-function mutation produces a constitutively active receptor and thus all germ cells are germline stem cells at the expense of meiotic cells. Essentially, there is a tumor of germline stem cells. glp-1(ar202) This partial gain-of-function mutation allows for some degree of germ cell differentiation but is characterized by an extended stem cell population and a germline tumor in the proximal region (where sperm normally reside). CC – BIOLOGY KILLIAN BY440 STEM CELL BIOLOGY - puf-8(lf) This mutation affects differentiation. Germline stem cells are maintained and daughters try to differentiate but fail to make proper gametes leading to gonads that do not contain (or contain few) sperm and oocytes. The mutation is partially temperature sensitive such that normal gametes form at lower temperatures and the animals are fertile, but gametogenesis fails at higher temperature and the animals are sterile. gld-1(null) This mutation affects a downstream member of the GLP-1 signaling pathway in germ cells. Mutants have germ cells that continue to proliferate and fail to differentiate because the normal function of gld-1 is to promote differentiation and inhibit proliferation in the absence of GLP-1 signaling. GLP-1 signaling inhibits GLD-1 activity. CC – BIOLOGY KILLIAN BY440 STEM CELL BIOLOGY C. elegans germline Stem Cell Lab – Questions 1. Within the germline stem cell population there are three different end results of a mitotic division: both daughter cells remain germline stem cells, both daughter cells differentiate via meiosis and gametogenesis, one daughter cell remains a stem cell and the other enters meiosis. What is the most likely determinant for which of these three options happens when any one given stem cell divides? How does the system ensure that there is an appropriate balance between stem cell maintenance and supply of gametes? 2. The C. elegans germline is a syncytium. How does this fact complicate how we think about the DTC/germline stem cell signaling pathway? Think about the LAG-2/GLP-1 signaling pathway and the events that occur “downstream” of receptor activation. 3. Match the mutant strain (A, B, C…..) to the following genotypes using your DAPI images, mutant descriptions in the lab manual and www.wormbase.org. _________ = glp-1(null) _________ = glp-1(temperature senstive) and shifted to non-permissive temperature _________ = glp-1(oz112gain-of-function) _________ = glp-1(ar202Pro) _________ = puf-8(loss-of-function) _________ = gld-1(null) CC – BIOLOGY KILLIAN BY440 STEM CELL BIOLOGY - 4. Some of these strains were maintained as heterozygotes and some are homozygous. Which ones are heterozygotes and which are homozygous? Why is it the case that some cannot be maintained as homozygotes while others can? 5. Suppose that one tinkers with the lag-2 gene and re-engineers it such that it lacks its transmembrane domain and thus the LAG-2 protein is secreted. How will this affect germline development in an otherwise WT animal? How will this affect germline development in glp-1(null) and glp-1(oz112gf) worms? 6. The lag-2(null) mutant phenotype might be expected to be equivalent to the glp-1(null) phenotype but it is surprisingly different; it is embryonic lethal. Which of the following genetic phenomenon could explain this: incomplete penetrance, variable expressivity, pleiotropy, or epigenetics? Briefly explain. 7. DAPI stains DNA and thus reveals some degree of nuclear morphology in stained samples. DAPI is listed as a possible mutagen although it is of minimal concern to the scientist so long as he/she is not licking it off his/her fingers. Briefly explain why DAPI is likely to be a mutagen if present in living cells. CC – BIOLOGY KILLIAN BY440 STEM CELL BIOLOGY - 8. For the glp-1(null); gld-1(null) double mutant, describe the germline phenotype that you would expect to see taking into account the phenotype of each single mutant and the knowledge of how the molecular signaling pathway works. 9. What would you expect to happen to the germline if the DTC were laser ablated in a worm that is homozygous gld-1(null)? Briefly explain. 10. Would you expect that there is a greater rate of transciption occuring in germline stem cells or oocytes? What is it about the specific nuclear mor phologies of these cell types is a big clue here?