Authors: Barton MK; Kimble J
Abstract: In wild-type Caenorhabditis elegans, the XO male germ line makes only sperm and the XX hermaphrodite germ line makes sperm and then oocytes. In contrast, the germ line of either a male or a hermaphrodite carrying a mutation of the fog-1 (feminization of the germ line) locus is sexually transformed: cells that would normally make sperm differentiate as oocytes. However, the somatic tissues of fog-1 mutants remain unaffected. All fog-1 alleles identified confer the same phenotype. The fog-1 mutations appear to reduce fog-1 function, indicating that the wild-type fog-1 product is required for specification of a germ cell as a spermatocyte. Two lines of evidence indicate that a germ cell is determined for sex at about the same time that it enters meiosis. These include the fog-1 temperature sensitive period, which coincides in each sex with first entry into meiosis, and the phenotype of a fog-1; glp-1 double mutant. Experiments with double mutants show that fog-1 is epistatic to mutations in all other sex-determining genes tested. These results lead to the conclusion that fog-1 acts at the same level as the fem genes at the end of the sex determination pathway to specify germ cells as sperm.
Keywords: Alleles; Animals; Caenorhabditis/*genetics/physiology; Chromosome Mapping; Epistasis, Genetic; Female; Genes; *Genes, Regulator; Genotype; Male; Mutation; Organ Specificity/genetics; Phenotype; *Sex Determination Analysis; Spermatogenesis/genetics; Temperature
Journal: Genetics Volume: 125 Issue: 1 Pages: 29-39 Date: May 1, 1990 PMID: 2341035 |
Barton MK, Kimble J (1990) fog-1, a regulatory gene required for specification of spermatogenesis in the germ line of Caenorhabditis elegans. Genetics 125: 29-39.
Comment on This Data Unit