Worm Breeder's Gazette 11(2): 51

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.

An Embryonic Histone-Binding Protein?

Anne Burkholder, Irene Schauer and W.B. Wood

We have identified an embryonic nuclear antigen that has several 
similarities to the Xenopus histone-binding protein N1 (see 
Kleinschmidt and Seiter, EMBO 7:1605,1988).  The antigen was 
identified in a screen of C.  elegans expression libraries with sera 
from rabbits immunized with homogenates of early embryos.  Plaques of 
positive clones were used to affinity purify cognate antibodies from 
the sera, which were then assayed for staining of fixed embryos by 
indirect immunofluorescence microscopy (Burkholder and Wood, C.  
elegans meeting abstr.  1989).  We obtained an antibody preparation 
that recognizes a diffuse nuclear antigen, present in oocytes 
beginning at pachytene and in all nuclei of early embryos, but 
becoming more restricted later in development.  In larvae, the 
staining is less intense and only in subsets of nuclei that correlate 
with the positions of proliferating cells, and in adults only maturing 
oocytes contain the antigen.  In mitotic cells the antigen is diffuse 
throughout the cytoplasm, and then appears to reassemble into the 
nucleus neither associated with chromatin or the nuclear envelope.  We 
have studied the cloned gene encoding this nuclear antigen, which is 
named D1.  The gene encodes a 2kb messenger RNA which is relatively 
abundant in early embryos, apparently resulting from the accumulation 
of maternally supplied transcripts.  Late embryos and L1's have very 
low levels of message.  The message encodes a 583 a.a.  protein with a 
predicted MW of 63kd, although the antibody detects a protein of 1 
00kd on an immunoblot of embryonic proteins.  This discrepancy is 
likely due to the highly charged nature of the protein, which has 25% 
acidic residues including one region where 13/18 residues are 
negatively charged.  A highly basic region near the C-terminus (
including the sequence TKKRKS) may function as the nuclear 
localization signal.  In a search of the Genbank protein database the 
most homologous protein was the Xenopus N1 protein, although sequence 
identity between the two proteins is only 20% over 572 residues.  This 
level of homology alone is not very convincing, but combined with the 
similar size, arrangement of highly charged regions, cellular location 
and developmental expression of the two proteins, we are exploring the 
possibility that the C.  elegans D1 protein has a histone-binding 
function similar to the Xenopus N1 protein.  Maternal stores of 
histones H3 and H4 are found in a complex with N1 protein, which is 
thought to promote chromatin formation during the rapid cleavage 
cycles of Xenopus embryos.  The D1 gene maps to YAC Y11G11 on V (A.  
Coulson and J.  Sulston, pers.  comm.), which places it on LGV between 
myo-3 and rrs-1 on the genetic map.  In that interval the only obvious 
candidate for a mutation in the D1 gene is the maternal-effect lethal 
mutation par-1; however, par-1 probably maps to the right of D1 
according to physical mapping data (A.  Telfer, pers.  comm.).