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Identification and Analysis of Mutations in bob, Doa and Eight New Genes Required for Oocyte Specification and Development in Drosophila melanogaster
Jason Z. Morris1,a, Caryn Navarro1,a, and Ruth Lehmannaa Developmental Genetics Program, The Skirball Institute and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, NYU School of Medicine, New York, New York 10016
Corresponding author: Ruth Lehmann, The Skirball Institute and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, NYU School of Medicine, 540 First Ave., 4th Floor, New York, NY 10016., lehmann{at}saturn.med.nyu.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: T. SCHUPBACH
| ABSTRACT |
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The Drosophila oocyte develops from a cluster of 16 interconnected cells that derive from a common progenitor. One of these cells, the oocyte, arrests in meiosis. The other cells endoreplicate their DNA and produce mRNAs and proteins that they traffic to the oocyte along a polarized microtubule cytoskeleton shared by the entire cyst. Therefore, Drosophila oogenesis is an attractive system for the study of cell cycle control and cell polarity. We carried out a clonal screen on the right arm of chromosome 3 for female sterile mutations using the FLP-FRT-ovoD system to identify new genes required for early oogenesis. We identified alleles of oo18 RNA binding protein (orb) and Darkener of apricot (Doa), which had previously been shown to exhibit oogenesis defects. We also identified several lethal alleles of the male sterile mutant, bobble (bob). In addition, we identified eight new lethal complementation groups that exhibit early oogenesis phenotypes. We analyzed mutant clones to determine the aspects of oogenesis disrupted by each complementation group. We assayed for the production and development of egg chambers, localization of ORB to and within the oocyte, and proper execution of the nurse cell cycle (endoreplication of DNA) and the oocyte cell cycle (karyosome formation). Here we discuss the identification, mapping, and phenotypic characterization of these new genes: omelet, soft boiled, hard boiled, poached, fried, over easy, sunny side up, and benedict.
THE development of the germ cells during Drosophila oogenesis poses an unusual challenge to the organism because within a single cyst of 16 cells, two radically different fates must be specified and executed (Fig 1). The 16 germ cells of each egg chamber are produced by four synchronous, incomplete cell divisions of a progenitor cell, the cystoblast (![]()
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Once the fates in the cyst have been specified, the appropriate developmental programs must be properly carried out. The oocyte condenses its DNA into a compact karyosome and remains arrested in meiotic prophase I until late in oogenesis (stage 10; ![]()
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The genes that have been shown to disrupt the development of germ cells into early egg chambers fall into three classes: the "spindle" or "karyosome" class, the 16-nurse-cell class, and the cystoblast division class. The loss-of-function phenotypes of the double-stranded break repair genes and related genes (commonly referred to as the spindle group) suggested that activation of a meiotic checkpoint can delay restriction of the oocyte fate to one of the pro-oocytes (![]()
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Clearly, the few genes that are known to be required to specify and execute the germ cell fates in the ovary represent only a subset of all genes needed to execute this process. Most of these genes were identified in genetic screens designed to isolate viable female sterile mutants (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Fly stocks:
The following genes were newly identified in the screen and used for phenotypic analysis: omelet, soft boiled, hard boiled, poached, fried, over easy, sunny side up, and benedict. (For details on alleles used and map positions, refer to Table 1.) Doa
3B and DoaHD were obtained from Leonard Rabinow. Transgenic flies used to create starting stocks for the screen, bobC871, the Bloomington 3R deficiency kit, and candidate mutants for complementation testing were obtained from the Bloomington Stock Center or were present in the laboratory. All flies were raised at 25° unless otherwise indicated.
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Mutagenesis and screening:
See Fig 2 for a schematic of the screen. Mutagenesis was carried out as described by C. YOHN and R. LEHMANN (unpublished data). All mutations were induced on an isogenic FRT-82B, e chromosome. We used several heat shock-FLP (hs-FLP) insertion lines and found that hs-FLP(22) induced clones somewhat more efficiently than hs-FLP(122). Our general heat-shock protocol was to place vials or bottles with larvae (35 days) into 37° conditions for 2 hr on 2 successive days. To optimize clone frequency, we also experimented with shorter and longer heat shocks, heat-shocking adults, and heat-shocking for 1 day instead of 2, without significantly increasing clone frequency. The cell lethality assay was performed as follows. hs-FLP/R1; FRT e*/ovoD males were crossed to virgin females carrying an eyeless-FLP transgene (w, ey-FLP; FRT, arm-lacZ, w+/TM6B females). The "R1" denotes a reporter chromosome used by other participants in the screen. Male w, ey-FLP; FRT e*/FRT arm-lacZ, w+ progeny were scored for white eye clones in an orange background. Males that generated eye clones were then balanced by crossing to hs-hid/TM3, Sb virgin females. The ß-galactosidase, ORB, 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) assay was carried out by crossing FRT e*/TM3, Sb to hs-FLP; FRT arm-lacZ, w+/TM3,Sb. Progeny were heat-shocked as larvae and hs-FLP/+; FRT e*/FRT arm-lacZ, w+ females were then scored for clone formation, DNA morphology, and ORB localization as described below. In most cases, many more than 10 clones were assayed. We note in the text the few instances where, despite extensive repetitions, we observed <5 clones.
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Dissection, fixation, staining, and microscopy:
Ovaries were dissected and stained in 18-well dishes made of Plexiglas and mesh to permit transferring the dishes from solution to solution without losing any ovarioles. Ovaries were dissected in 1x PBS and fixed in 6% formaldehyde in 1x PBT (1x PBS + 0.1% Triton X-100) for 20 min at room temperature. Ovaries were then washed in 1x PBTB (1x PBS + 0.1% Triton X-100 + 1% BSA) several times for a total of 45 min. After blocking in PBTB + 5% normal donkey serum for 30 min, ovaries were incubated in primary antibody overnight at 4°. For ORB staining, 6H4 antiserum, 4H8 antiserum (Schedl, Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank), and 1x PBTB were used at 1:1:8. ß-Galactosidase antiserum (Cappel Laboratories, Malvern, PA) was used at 1:2000. The next day ovaries were washed four times for a total of 1 hr in PBTB blocked in PBTB + 5% normal donkey serum for 30 min and then incubated in secondary antibody for 2 hr at room temperature. Ovaries were then washed four times in PBT for a total of 1 hr and mounted in 50% glycerol, 2.5% DABCO (1,4-diazabicyclo [2.2.2] octane) in PBS or in aqua PolyMount (PolySciences, Warrington, PA). Staining was visualized using a Leica TCS-NT confocal microscope as noted in the figure legends.
Complementation, cloning, and allele sequencing:
Within the group of the 38 most interesting mutants, lines with similar map positions based on deficiency mapping and lines that were not uncovered by any deficiency were tested for complementation against each other (see RESULTS). Lines that complemented all other candidates within this group were complementation tested for lethality against the 208 weaker mutants isolated in the screen (see RESULTS). In one of our complementation groups, soft boiled, allele 6-57 exhibited a consistent 16-nurse-cell phenotype while allele 30-1 generated mostly normal clones in our rescreen. The initial identification of 30-1 as an oogenesis mutant was based on two abnormal clones and was tentative. It is possible that these alleles fail to complement because they share a lethal mutation that maps to 91C7-91D1. The soft boiled 16-nurse-cell phenotype might therefore be unmapped. Although sunny side up133-46 carried several lethal mutations that mapped to different places on 3R, it was also lethal in trans to 114-11, which complemented all the deficiencies in the deficiency kit. We meiotically mapped 114-11 by crossing it to ru st cu sr ca flies and allowing the ru st cu sr/e* females to recombine and mate with hs-hid/TM3 males. Balanced males were complementation tested against ru st cu sr e Pr ca and against 133-46 so that we could correlate the map position of the 114-11 mutation with the map positions of ru st cu sr e and ca.
Once mutants were mapped to a region, they were complementation tested against candidate sterile and lethal mutants from that region as annotated by the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project and FlyBase. In this way, we identified our only sterile complementation group as new orb alleles. The molecular nature of our two Doa mutations was identified by using the Expand Hi Fidelity PCR kit (Roche, Indianapolis) to amplify the coding regions and splice sites of Doa from genomic DNA isolated from the mutant lines that failed to complement Doa alleles. Multiple independent PCR reactions were used to amplify each exon of the gene prior to pooling for sequencing in an ABI Prism 3700 machine (Rockefeller University DNA Sequencing Resource Center). SeqMan II (DNASTAR, Madison, WI) and EditView (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) were used for analysis of sequencing. Sequencing and analysis of bob candidates were performed in the same manner.
| RESULTS |
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Generating mutants and primary screen:
To identify oogenesis mutants, we participated in a large-scale mutagenesis and primary screen with other groups in our lab who were interested in genes required for germ cell formation, oocyte patterning, and germ cell migration (C. YOHN, A. FORBES, M. SAMUELS, E. STAEVA-VIEIRA, J. STEIN, H. ZINSNER and R. LEHMANN, unpublished observations). We induced clones in heterozygous females using the hs-FLP-FRT/ovoD system (![]()
Isolating early oogenesis mutants:
We were interested in only those lines that were sterile, because these lines might carry mutations that caused defects in early oogenesis. Before characterizing the oogenesis phenotype of these mutants in detail, we performed several tests. Repeating the sterility test permitted us to discard lines that simply failed to produce clones in the primary screen (Fig 2, recombination option ii). We also induced clones homozygous for each of our lines in the eye imaginal disc using the efficient ey-FLP system. We discarded lines that failed to generate viable clones in the eye to select for genes that specifically affect oogenesis, but are not required for general viability in other tissues such as the eye. To screen for early oogenesis phenotypes, we initially analyzed the ovaries of some of our sterile lines after inducing clones in trans to the ovoD mutation. Since we were unable to distinguish early oogenesis defects from defects caused by ovoD in heterozygous egg chambers (Fig 2, recombination options ii and iii), we proceeded to analyze the oogenesis phenotypes of all our lines after crossing the mutant lines to flies carrying an FRT and arm-lacZ insertion on 3R. We detected clones homozygous for the mutagenized FRT chromosome by the absence of ß-galactosidase and characterized mutant phenotypes by staining with antibodies raised against the oocyte-specific marker, ORB, and the DNA marker DAPI. We divided the lines into three categories. Thirty-eight lines generated clones that arrested before stage 5 and/or showed ORB localization defects. A total of 208 lines failed to generate clones, suggesting a very early role, generated clones that did not develop beyond stage 8, or had phenotypes similar to those we observed in the set of 38 mutants, but at lower penetrance. We discarded lines that did not show an early oogenesis phenotype or that developed beyond stage 8.
Mapping and complementation:
To determine how many different genes were represented among the 38 most interesting mutants, we placed these lines into complementation groups. We tested the 38 lines in trans to the Bloomington 3R deficiency kit for lethality and sterility. We then performed complementation tests among those lines that failed to complement the same deficiency and between lines that complemented the entire deficiency kit. Eighteen of these 38 lines complemented all of the other most interesting lines and also did not map to a well-defined region of chromosome 3R. In some cases, these lines complemented the entire deficiency collection, while in other cases the mutant line failed to complement several deficiencies in different regions of 3R. We did not include these mutants in our further study.
We isolated three alleles, 11-50, 36-53, and 116-8, that were not uncovered by any of the deficiencies tested and were sterile in trans to each other. These mutants displayed a range of phenotypes including early oogenesis arrest and oocyte-specification defects that were reminiscent of class II orb alleles (![]()
The alleles of the next complementation group (8-37, 38-2, and 43-21) were lethal in trans to each other and also in trans to deficiencies that limited their map position to the 82D382D8 interval. We complementation tested these lines against candidate lethal and sterile mutants that had been mapped to this region. One candidate, bob, yielded a very interesting result. bob has two previously reported mutant alleles: a lethal EMS-induced allele and a male sterile P-element allele (![]()
The third group included two alleles, 12-44 and 198-14, that were lethal in trans to each other as well as to Df(3R)3450, which uncovers 98E3; 99A6-8. The alleles were also lethal in trans to a number of deficiencies that did not uncover the same region of 3R but that had in common an additional breakpoint in 98F1-2. We showed that 12-44 and 198-14 are lethal in trans to Doa, a candidate lethal mutation that mapped to 98F1-2. Doa was previously identified as a dual specificity, serine-threonine-tyrosine kinase (![]()
3B, in trans to a FRT-82B, arm-lacZ marker chromosome and found that homozygous Doa
3B germ cell clones died shortly after encapsulation by follicle cells, leading to budded egg chambers of healthy follicle cells in which germ cells were absent or dying. Taken together, our data demonstrate that 12-44 and 198-14 are weak alleles of Doa and that wild-type DOA activity is required for germ cell survival. Further phenotypic analysis indicates a role for Doa in early oogenesis as well (see below).
Ten of the remaining lines each mapped unambiguously to a single region of 3R on the basis of deficiency mapping, but these lines complemented the other candidates from the group of most interesting mutants. We therefore performed complementation tests with these lines against the 208 lines that had uncharacterized, later, or less penetrant defects. Consequently, in addition to orb, Doa, bob, and sunny side up, we were able to define seven additional multiallelic groups of mutations that produced early oogenesis defects: poached, fried, soft boiled, hard boiled, benedict, omelet, and over easy, which mapped to small regions of chromosome 3R (Table 1). Three lines from our screen, 20-51, 27-25, and 194-26, mapped to defined regions of 3R on the basis of deficiency complementation data but complemented all other mutants found in our screen or candidate genes in the region uncovered by the relevant deficiencies. We did not analyze these single mutant lines further.
Phenotypic analysis:
We studied the phenotypes of the 10 multiallelic, mapped complementation groups (excluding orb) by generating clones in trans to a FRT-82B, arm-lacZ marker chromosome and examining the pattern of ORB and DAPI staining with fluorescent and confocal microscopy. We characterized the mutants according to the following criteria: (1) nurse cell/oocyte fate specification; (2) stage of developmental arrest; (3) pattern and distribution of ORB protein; and (4) the morphology of the nurse cell and oocyte chromosomes (Table 2). Using these markers we were able to assess the extent to which nurse cell and oocyte fates were specified, whether egg chambers were capable of development or arrested at certain stages, the extent to which ORB was properly localized to the oocyte and within the oocyte, and the state of the oocyte nucleus and the nurse cell nuclei. From this analysis we concluded that the mutants fell into three general phenotypic classes.
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Common to mutations in all complementation groups is an arrest early in oogenesis (Fig 3A, A', and A''), usually before stage 6 and sometimes as early as stage 3, and defects in localizing ORB to the oocyte (Fig 3A' and B'). In addition and presumably as a consequence of the developmental arrest, many chambers degenerated, usually after they arrested. In degenerating chambers, DAPI staining showed condensed, fragmented chromosomes. ORB staining in these chambers was absent or punctate (Fig 3C, Fig C', and C''). Phenotypic class I exhibited all the above defects, and mutants in this class show normal chromosomal morphology in the oocyte and nurse cells. This phenotypic class includes mutations in the genes hard boiled, over easy, omelet, sunny side up, and poached (Fig 3; Table 2). Phenotypic class II exhibited the defects observed in class I and in addition exhibited defects in the chromosomal morphology of the nurse cells and/or oocyte (Fig 4; Table 2). This class included Doa, bob, benedict, and fried. Phenotypic class III exhibited a 16-nurse-cell defect. This class included soft boiled (Fig 5; Table 2).
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Class I:
We isolated three alleles of hard boiled: 32-3, 46-6, and 52-22. All three alleles produce arrested chambers, degenerating chambers filled with dying cells, and chambers that specify an oocyte that forms a karyosome and accumulates some ORB; but in many cases, total ORB levels in the egg chamber seemed reduced and ORB failed to accumulate strongly in the oocyte. The karyosome in hard boiled mutants did not always appear perfectly condensed, but it is difficult to determine if that is a specific chromosomal defect or the beginning of degeneration.
In addition to arresting at stage 4 or 5, omelet146-34 chambers exhibited weak accumulation of ORB to the oocyte. Sometimes ORB was undetectable or very faint and evenly distributed within the oocyte although the karyosome appeared normal. The 36-63 allele generated only two clones out of hundreds of ovaries examined. One stage 10 clone appeared normal. The other degenerated at stage 8.
The three alleles of over easy that we isolated exhibited different degrees of defects (Fig 3B, Fig B', and B''). 18-12 chambers always arrested at stage 3 and sometimes degenerated. ORB was barely enriched in one of the cells of the chamber. over easy63-5 produced very few clones, several clones with wild-type morphology, one as late as stage 10, one clone that arrested at stage 6, and a clone that degenerated at stage 8. 71-36 failed to complement over easy18-12 and over easy63-5 for lethality, but we were unable to analyze clones homozygous for 71-36 although we examined hundreds of ovaries and tried several heat-shock regimens (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). It is possible that strong alleles of over easy cause cell lethality.
poached35-22 egg chambers usually arrested between stage 3 and 6 (Fig 3C, Fig C', and C''). ORB rarely accumulated in one cell of these egg chambers, and if so only barely. poached38-6 chambers show a similar arrest phenotype, although we observed some chambers that appeared normal as late as stage 8.
The two sunny side up alleles, 114-11 and 133-46, displayed a very similar phenotype (Fig 3A, A', and A''): egg chambers usually arrested by stage 6, although we observed one wild-type chamber as late as stage 12. ORB was very faint or even undetectable in most chambers.
Class II:
Phenotypic class II egg chambers exhibited ORB localization defects and early oogenesis arrest similar to those observed in mutants of class I. In addition, egg chambers from class II exhibited unusual defects in the oocyte and nurse cell nuclear morphology and in ORB localization within the oocyte. This phenotype is quite distinct from the phenotype reported for the weak cyclin E allele, cycE01672. In that mutant, two cells form karyosomes and the nurse cells endoreplicate their chromosomes (![]()
As described above, we isolated two weak alleles of Doa, Doa12-44 and Doa198-14. The phenotype of Doa null germline clones is cell-autonomous lethality after the encapsulation of the germ cells by follicle cells. The observation that the germ cells are viable during the initial stages of oogenesis may be due to perdurance of DOA protein that was inherited from a heterozygous stem cell when the clone was initially generated. The defects we observed in Doa12-44 and Doa198-14 egg chambers suggested a role for Doa in regulating nurse cell replication and karyosome stability. The nurse cell chromosomes in Doa chambers were often strikingly underreplicated and nurse cell nuclei of older egg chambers had the morphology of younger, stage 3 wild-type chambers. When nurse cells did replicate their chromosomes, they often appeared to remain polytene beyond stage 5, in contrast to wild-type chambers, which lose their condensed appearance at this stage (Fig 4A''). In addition, the karyosome was sometimes incompletely condensed, suggesting that the oocyte may not be properly maintaining meiotic arrest. Also, ORB localization was often quite weak (Fig 4A'). Rarely, we observed 16-nurse-cell chambers.
The most prominent bob phenotype was observed during midoogenesis. In contrast with wild-type egg chambers at this stage, ORB was still localized anterior to the oocyte nucleus, suggesting that the microtubule cytoskeleton did not rearrange appropriately at stage 1 (Fig 4B'). We isolated three bob alleles: 38-2, 43-21, and 8-37. The 8-37 allele produced only a few clones, all of which arrested very early. In addition to defective relocalization of ORB to the posterior of the oocyte, bob chambers exhibited fragmented karyosomes. This karyosome defect may indicate a problem in meiotic maintenance or perhaps in double-stranded break repair (see DISCUSSION). The nurse cell nuclei in bob chambers appeared to replicate normally. Most bob chambers exhibited poor accumulation of ORB in the oocyte and arrested between stage 3 and 6, although we observed one normal chamber as late as stage 8.
We isolated two alleles of benedict, 50-40 and 112-38. benedict chambers display a number of salient defects. Both alleles produced clones with underreplicated nurse cells whose nuclei retained polytene morphology beyond stage 5. benedict karyosomes were fragmented or stringy. We also observed allele-specific phenotypes. The 50-40 mutation predominantly affected the karyosome (Fig 4C'') while the 112-38 mutation had a strong effect on the nurse cell nuclei (not shown, but similar to fried defect shown in 4D''). ORB staining was also unusual in benedict50-40 chambers: it appeared patchy and distributed unevenly throughout the oocyte cytoplasm instead of collecting evenly at the posterior of the oocyte (Fig 4C'). This localization phenotype was observed much less frequently in benedict112-38. This patchy localization phenotype within the oocyte is distinct from the anterior localization defect we observed in bob, but the two phenotypes are grouped together as defects in ORB localization within the oocyte in Table 2. ORB accumulation in the oocyte was sometimes weak in benedict (Fig 4C'), and chambers usually arrested by stage 6.
fried egg chambers specify an oocyte, but the karyosome is often stringy or not properly condensed. We isolated three alleles: 212-11, 150-66, and 63-500. In addition to the karyosome defect, the 212-11 allele also showed a defect in nurse cell endoreplication and perdurance of polyteny (Fig 4D''), as does the 63-500 allele at lower frequency. ORB localization in fried chambers is usually weak (Fig 4D'). In contrast to the other mutants we isolated, we did not observe obviously growth-arrested fried chambers although we did not detect any chambers older than stage 8.
Class III:
The third phenotypic class is the 16-nurse-cell phenotype. This phenotype is characteristic of several female sterile mutations that have been identified in other screens, including egl, BicD, orb, and stonewall (stwl; ![]()
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| DISCUSSION |
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We report here the results of a clonal screen designed to isolate mutants defective in oocyte specification and early oogenesis on the right arm of chromosome 3. Out of 9992 single female crosses screened, we identified 11 multiallelic complementation groups that we mapped to a small region or a specific genetic locus. These 11 groups include the previously described oocyte-specification factor, orb (![]()
The screen:
One important question is whether our screen saturated for mutations that cause oocyte defects on 3R. The fact that three of our most interesting mutants are represented only by a single allele (Table 1) and that we isolated no bam alleles at all would argue against saturation, in spite of the screen's relatively high lethal hit rate (C. YOHN and R. LEHMANN, unpublished observations). It is possible that the primary screen was saturating, but that we lost many alleles in our subsequent tests. In particular, the cell lethality screen would have selected against mutations in genes that are required for eye cell viability as well as for a specific function in oogenesis. We believe that Doa is one example of such a gene since strong alleles of Doa are cell lethal in every tissue tested (![]()
Another question is why the clone frequency we observed for the mutants in our screen was so low. In general, the clone frequency we observed in our mutant lines was quite low compared to the isogenized strain we used for the screen, and clone frequency varied significantly from line to line. One possibility is that clone frequency was reduced because mutagenesis induced multiple lesions on 3R. Alternatively, most of our mutants may somehow interfere with germline viability, as suggested by those omelet and over easy alleles, that completely failed to produce clones.
Analysis of the mutant phenotypes:
Our mutants fall into different classes with respect to oocyte specification, karyosome condensation, nurse cell endoreplication, and localization of ORB within the oocyte. Only two of the genes we describe here, bob and soft boiled, produce phenotypes that resemble those described previously for other genes. The other genes reveal novel phenotypes or combinations of phenotypes that had previously not been observed.
Mutations in bob disrupt posterior localization of ORB within the oocyte and also show a 16-nurse-cell phenotype. These phenotypes show striking similarity to mutations in par-1, which disrupt the posterior localization of the microtubule organizing center and induce the oocyte to exit meiotic arrest and enter the nurse cell endoreplication program (![]()
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Mutations in one of our two soft boiled alleles consistently produced a 16-nurse-cell phenotype and we rarely detected any sign of oocyte specification in mutant egg chambers. Genes with a similar phenotype, such as BicD, egl, Lissencephaly-1, and Dhc have been implicated in microtubule-mediated transport (![]()
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Our remaining mutants display phenotypes or combinations of phenotypes that have previously not been described. With the possible exception of fried, all of the mutants we report here arrest or exhibit dramatically slowed growth by midoogenesis. Also, even in class I mutants where the oocyte is specified (on the basis of at least some criteria for oocyte determination, such as karyosome condensation and enrichment of ORB in a single cell), we observe failure to traffic ORB from the nurse cells to the oocyte and to accumulate normal ORB levels in the oocyte. We do not believe that nonspecific defects cause ORB localization failure and egg chamber arrest because the vast majority of the lines we examined in the screen did not exhibit these phenotypes even though almost all of them carried lethal mutations on chromosome 3. The growth arrest and ORB localization phenotypes we observed in poached, hard boiled, omelet, over easy, and sunny side up are therefore likely to result from specific defects in oogenesis such as defects in nurse-cell-to-oocyte transport that do not affect other aspects of oogenesis such as karyosome formation.
The phenotypes we observed in Doa, benedict, and fried suggest a link between nurse cell endoreplication and meiotic arrest of the oocyte. Doa, benedict, and fried disrupt both karyosome condensation and nurse cell endoreplication, suggesting roles for these genes in regulating the cell cycle in nurse cells and oocytes. In contrast, mutations in bob and in the spindle and par-1 pathways cause defects in karyosome condensation but not in nurse cell endoreplication. The wider range of defects observed in Doa, fried, and benedict may indicate that these genes act more globally in regulating chromosome behavior in the germline, while bob and the spindle genes specifically function in meiosis. Alternatively, Doa, fried, and benedict may simply be required before the nurse cell and oocyte fates have been specified within the cyst, causing both cell types to exhibit defects in these mutants.
The phenotypes observed in the two alleles of benedict are distinct but overlapping. benedict50-40 chambers often exhibit a unique ORB localization phenotype. Rather than clearly accumulating ORB at the anterior or posterior of the oocyte, as fried and Doa chambers do, many benedict50-40 chambers localize ORB in a patchy pattern within the oocyte. It is unclear what could be causing this localization pattern, since this phenotype has not been reported in mutations that disrupt microtubule stability or microtubule repolarization such as par-1. The 50-40 allele very rarely disrupts nurse cell endoreplication. benedict112-38 disrupts nurse cell endoreplication, like fried and Doa mutants, but rarely exhibits the ORB localization defects observed in 50-40 chambers. Both benedict alleles exhibit the karyosome defects that are also observed in fried and Doa. The differences in the phenotypes of the benedict alleles may point to separable functions for this gene. One function, disrupted in the 50-40 allele, localizes ORB within the oocyte, probably in a process that is distinct from microtubule reorganization. The other function, disrupted in the 112-38 allele, acts in nurse cell endoreplication, like fried and Doa. Both benedict functions appear to be required for proper karyosome condensation.
A major advantage of our clonal screen over a recessive female sterile screen is the capacity to uncover a function in oogenesis for homozygous lethal genes. Consequently, screening 20% of the Drosophila genome enabled us to isolate eight new lethal genes required for oogenesis and to uncover a requirement in oogenesis for two previously described lethal genes. Furthermore, two of the phenotypes we describe, the failure of nurse cells to endoreplicate properly and the patchy ORB localization we observed in benedict50-40, have not been reported previously. It is likely that entire phenotypic classes can be uncovered only in a clonal screen because certain phenotypes result from defects in processes required for viability. Similar screens covering the remaining 80% of the genome are therefore likely to prove very useful in identifying the genes required for nurse cell/oocyte fate specification and oogenesis.
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Chris Yohn for organizing the 3R screen and the Lehmann Lab 3R screen team (Chris Yohn, Zandy Forbes, Monique Samuels, Eric Staeva-Vieira, Jennifer Stein, and Helene Zinszner) for their work on the screen and Frankie Kimm and Luisa Cambero for their technical assistance. We would also like to thank Lilach Gilboa and other members of the Lehmann lab past and present for helpful discussion. We are grateful to Lenny Rabinow for generously sharing his unpublished data and reagents and advice. We thank Steve Wasserman for advice on bob and the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center for providing us with the deficiency kit and many, many mutant stocks. We also thank Terry Orr-Weaver for helpful discussion. Jason Morris was supported in part by the American Cancer Society and by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Caryn Navarro was supported in part by the Ann Siegel American Cancer Society Fellowship and by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Ruth Lehmann is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
Manuscript received December 27, 2002; Accepted for publication March 3, 2003.
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