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MADD-2, a homolog of the Opitz syndrome protein MID1, regulates guidance to the midline through UNC-40 in Caenorhabditis elegans.

Dev. Cell. 2010 Jun 15;18(6):961-72
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摘要


The body muscles of Caenorhabditis elegans extend plasma membrane extensions called muscle arms to the midline motor axons to form the postsynaptic membrane of the neuromuscular junction. Through a screen for muscle arm development defective (Madd) mutants, we previously discovered that the UNC-40/DCC guidance receptor directs muscle arm extension through the Rho-GEF UNC-73. Here, we describe a gene identified through our mutant screen called madd-2, and show that it functions in an UNC-40 pathway. MADD-2 is a C1-TRIM protein and a homolog of human MID1, mutations in which cause Opitz Syndrome. We demonstrate that MADD-2 functions cell autonomously to direct muscle and axon extensions to the ventral midline of worms. Our results suggest that MADD-2 may enhance UNC-40 pathway activity by facilitating an interaction between UNC-40 and UNC-73. The analogous phenotypes that result from MADD-2 and MID1 mutations suggest that C1-TRIM proteins may have a conserved biological role in midline-oriented developmental events.

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