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    Date Issued2006 (2)2005 (1)2002 (1)AuthorBei, Yanxia (4)Mello, Craig C. (4)
    Pang, Ka Ming (4)
    Brownell, Daniel R. (2)Mitani, Shohei (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationGraduate School of Biomedical Sciences (4)Program in Molecular Medicine (4)Document TypeJournal Article (4)KeywordLife Sciences (4)Medicine and Health Sciences (4)Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Binding, Competitive; Caenorhabditis elegans; Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins; DNA-Binding Proteins; Endoribonucleases; Exoribonucleases; Gene Deletion; Mass Spectrometry; MicroRNAs; Models, Biological; Molecular Sequence Data; Molecular Structure; Proteomics; RNA Interference; RNA Replicase; RNA, Small Interfering; Sequence Alignment; Signal Transduction (1)Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Caenorhabditis elegans; Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins; Cell Division; Cell Nucleus; Cell Polarity; Cytoskeletal Proteins; Green Fluorescent Proteins; Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins; Membrane Proteins; Molecular Sequence Data; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; *Signal Transduction; Trans-Activators; Wnt Proteins; beta Catenin (1)Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Caenorhabditis elegans; Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins; Embryo, Nonmammalian; Models, Genetic; Molecular Sequence Data; Mutation; Phylogeny; Protein Binding; *RNA Interference; RNA, Helminth; RNA, Small Interfering; Recombinant Fusion Proteins (1)View MoreJournalCell (2)Developmental cell (1)Genes and development (1)

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    Analysis of the C. elegans Argonaute family reveals that distinct Argonautes act sequentially during RNAi

    Yigit, Erbay; Batista, Pedro J.; Bei, Yanxia; Pang, Ka Ming; Chen, Chun-Chieh G.; Tolia, Niraj H.; Joshua-Tor, Leemor; Mitani, Shohei; Simard, Martin J.; Mello, Craig C. (2006-11-18)
    Argonaute (AGO) proteins interact with small RNAs to mediate gene silencing. C. elegans contains 27 AGO genes, raising the question of what roles these genes play in RNAi and related gene-silencing pathways. Here we describe 31 deletion alleles representing all of the previously uncharacterized AGO genes. Analysis of single- and multiple-AGO mutant strains reveals functions in several pathways, including (1) chromosome segregation, (2) fertility, and (3) at least two separate steps in the RNAi pathway. We show that RDE-1 interacts with trigger-derived sense and antisense RNAs to initiate RNAi, while several other AGO proteins interact with amplified siRNAs to mediate downstream silencing. Overexpression of downstream AGOs enhances silencing, suggesting that these proteins are limiting for RNAi. Interestingly, these AGO proteins lack key residues required for mRNA cleavage. Our findings support a two-step model for RNAi, in which functionally and structurally distinct AGOs act sequentially to direct gene silencing.
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    Functional proteomics reveals the biochemical niche of C. elegans DCR-1 in multiple small-RNA-mediated pathways

    Duchaine, Thomas F.; Wohlschlegel, James A.; Kennedy, Scott; Bei, Yanxia; Conte, Darryl; Pang, Ka Ming; Brownell, Daniel R.; Harding, Sandra; Mitani, Shohei; Ruvkun, Gary; et al. (2006-01-28)
    In plants, animals, and fungi, members of the Dicer family of RNase III-related enzymes process double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) to initiate small-RNA-mediated gene-silencing mechanisms. To learn how C. elegans Dicer, DCR-1, functions in multiple distinct silencing mechanisms, we used a mass-spectrometry-based proteomics approach to identify DCR-1-interacting proteins. We then generated and characterized deletion alleles for the corresponding genes. The interactors are required for production of three species of small RNA, including (1) small interfering RNAs (siRNAs), derived from exogenous dsRNA triggers (exo-siRNAs); (2) siRNAs derived from endogenous triggers (endo-siRNAs); and (3) developmental regulatory microRNAs (miRNAs). One interactor, the conserved RNA-phosphatase homolog PIR-1, is required for the processing of a putative amplified DCR-1 substrate. Interactors required for endo-siRNA production include ERI-1 and RRF-3, whose loss of function enhances RNAi. Our findings provide a first glimpse at the complex biochemical niche of Dicer and suggest that competition exists between DCR-1-mediated small-RNA pathways.
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    Wnt signaling drives WRM-1/beta-catenin asymmetries in early C. elegans embryos

    Nakamura, Tatsuya; Kim, Soyoung; Ishidate, Takao; Bei, Yanxia; Pang, Ka Ming; Shirayama, Masaki; Trzepacz, Chris; Brownell, Daniel R.; Mello, Craig C. (2005-08-04)
    beta-Catenin regulates cell adhesion and cellular differentiation during development, and misregulation of beta-catenin contributes to numerous forms of cancer in humans. Here we describe Caenorhabditis elegans conditional alleles of mom-2/Wnt, mom-4/Tak1, and wrm-1/beta-catenin. We use these reagents to examine the regulation of WRM-1/beta-catenin during a Wnt-signaling-induced asymmetric cell division. While WRM-1 protein initially accumulates in the nuclei of all cells, signaling promotes the retention of WRM-1 in nuclei of responding cells. We show that both PRY-1/Axin and the nuclear exportin homolog IMB-4/CRM-1 antagonize signaling. These findings reveal how Wnt signals direct the asymmetric localization of beta-catenin during polarized cell division.
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    SRC-1 and Wnt signaling act together to specify endoderm and to control cleavage orientation in early C. elegans embryos

    Bei, Yanxia; Hogan, Jennifer; Berkowitz, Laura A.; Soto, Martha C.; Rocheleau, Christian Ernest; Pang, Ka Ming; Collins, John J.; Mello, Craig C. (2002-07-12)
    In early C. elegans embryos, signaling between a posterior blastomere, P2, and a ventral blastomere, EMS, specifies endoderm and orients the division axis of the EMS cell. Although Wnt signaling contributes to this polarizing interaction, no mutants identified to date abolish P2/EMS signaling. Here, we show that two tyrosine kinase-related genes, src-1 and mes-1, are required for the accumulation of phosphotyrosine between P2 and EMS. Moreover, src-1 and mes-1 mutants strongly enhance endoderm and EMS spindle rotation defects associated with Wnt pathway mutants. SRC-1 and MES-1 signal bidirectionally to control cell fate and division orientation in both EMS and P2. Our findings suggest that Wnt and Src signaling function in parallel to control developmental outcomes within a single responding cell.
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