Abstract

Genetic evidence suggests that the mei-1 locus of Caenorhabditis elegans encodes a maternal product required for female meiosis. However, a dominant gain-of-function allele, mei-1(ct46), can support normal meiosis but causes defects in subsequent mitotic spindles. Previously identified intragenic suppressors of ct46 lack functional mei-1 activity; null alleles suppress only in cis but other alleles arise frequently and suppress both in cis and in trans. Using a different screen for suppressors of the dominant ct46 defect, the present study describes another type of intragenic mutation that also arises at high frequency. These latter alleles appear to have reduced meiotic activity and retain a weakened dominant effect. Characterization of these alleles in trans-heterozygous combinations with previously identified mei-1 alleles has enabled us to define more clearly the role of the mei-1 gene product during normal embryogenesis. We propose that a certain level of mei-1 activity is required for meiosis but must be eliminated prior to mitosis. The dominant mutation causes mei-1 activity to function at mitosis; intragenic trans-suppressors act in an antimorphic manner to inactivate multimeric mei-1 complexes. We propose that inactivation of meiosis-specific functions may be an essential precondition of mitosis; failure to eliminate such functions may allow ectopic meiotic activity during mitosis and cause embryonic lethality.

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