Worm Breeder's Gazette 11(2): 25

These abstracts should not be cited in bibliographies. Material contained herein should be treated as personal communication and should be cited as such only with the consent of the author.

Studies of hsp-16 and ubq-1 Expression in the Nematode Caenorhabditis elegans

Eve Stringham, Don Jones and Peter Candido

Figure 1

To further study hsp-16 and ubq-1 expression we are introducing into 
the worm fusions of these genes to the E. coli  -galactosidase gene 
and assaying for enzymatic activity.  Two methods are being employed 
to study gene expression.  Stable transgenic lines are established by 
microinjecting into hermaphrodite oocytes the  -gal fusion vector of 
interest along with an antisense unc-22 construct (kindly provided by 
Andrew Fire) and selecting for twitching progeny.  Alternatively, in a 
transient assay the  -gal fusion vector is injected alone into 
nematode oocytes and the resulting progeny are directly screened for  -
galactosidase expression.  The latter method has been extremely useful 
for initial testing of constructs, e.g.  in deletion analysis, where 
only a positive or negative answer with respect to expression is 
required, and as a control, for comparison with stable lines in order 
to determine if a co-injected selectable plasmid alters the expression 
of the fusion vector.
Deletion analysis of 930 bp of sequence upstream of the 
translational start of the ubq-1 (previously named ubiA) gene has 
yielded some surprising results.  Nematodes carrying constructs 
containing all of this region (ubq delta0) express  -galactosidase 
primarily in embryos and in the head and tail and along the body wall 
of all other stages.  It is difficult to determine the exact cells 
which express the construct since the enzyme is readily diffusible.  
However, these cells are probably neuronal in nature since 
transformation with a larger upstream fragment (ubq 1.8 Eco) which 
also contains the SV40 nuclear localization signal directs expression 
to neuronal nuclei of the pharynx, head and tail, and along the 
ventral nerve cord.  In addition, possibly some large intestinal 
nuclei are affected in the early larval stages.  No difference in  -
galactosidase expression was observed in ubq delta0 stable lines when 
treated with heat shock.
Progressively larger deletions extending from the 5' end of ubq 
delta0 do not significantly alter the pattern of expression until 830 
bp of sequence has been removed, 330 bp downstream from the 
transcriptional start (5'SS), and about 120 bp upstream of the initial 
methionine.  ubq delta 830 embryos stain blue intensely within one 
hour while ubq delta918 embryos stain marginally after overnight 
development.  Embryos carrying ubq-pvu delta918, a construct of the 
first 550bp of ubq delta0 fused to ubq delta918 , show expression 
intermediate between that of ubq delta830 and ubq delta918.  No 
expression in adults or larvae has been observed for ubq delta830, ubq 
delta918, or ubq-pvu delta918.  The ubq delta918 break point is only 
30 bp upstream of the 3' acceptor site (3'ss) for the leader (SL1) 
which is trans-spliced onto the hnRNA.  To determine if the  -gal 
message in ubq delta0 is trans-spliced as ubq-1 RNA normally is, we 
used PCR and oligonucleotides for SL1 and  -gal to selectively amplify 
only a trans-spliced  -gal transcript.  The resulting band was eluted, 
cloned and is currently being sequenced to verify the presence of SL1. 
It will be interesting to see if  -galactosidase expression in both 
ubq delta830 and ubq delta918 worms results from a trans-spliced 
transcript as well or if perhaps the low residual activity in ubiA 
delta918 is the result of a cis spliced mechanism.
We are also studying the expression of constructs containing regions 
of the hsp-16 gene promoters fused to  -galactosidase by both 
transient assay and stable transformation .  When animals containing 
the intergenic region of the hsp16-48/1 locus are heat shocked and 
stained for  -galactosidase activity, primarily embryos and neuronal 
cells are stained, with secondary staining occurring in the intestinal 
cells of some animals.  Strains of the hsp16-41/2 locus stain very 
intensely in embryos and intestinal nuclei with some secondary 
staining in head and tail nuclei and occasionally in neurons of the 
ventral cord (Dennis Dixon has obtained similar results with this 
construct).  Thus, while both loci seem capable of expression in the 
same tissues the priority of expression for each locus differs.  No 
staining was detectable in any of these strains under nonshock 
conditions.
Transient assays of a construct containing the  -gal gene inserted 
into the first exon of the hsp16-1 gene results in extremely rapid and 
intense staining in embryos and worms.  Some nematodes stain only in 
head and tail neurons while others appear to be saturated with stain 
in all tissues, except for the gonad.  We are currently attempting to 
obtain some stable lines with this construct though initial results 
are disappointing.  So far, 70 worms have been injected but no stable 
transformants have been obtained.
The frequency of transmission of the unc-22 and staining phenotypes 
ranges from 5-95%.  No strains to date have shown Mendelian 
inheritance.  Southern analysis suggests the injected DNA forms 
relatively large arrays.  Also, all strains for a particular construct 
show the same pattern of expression suggesting there are no positional 
effects.  For these reasons, we believe the injected DNA probably 
forms extrachromosomal arrays which are heritable.  This is in 
agreement with Andy Fire's results using unc-22 selection (personal 
communication ).
[See Figure 1]

Figure 1