Abstract

Eleven temperature-sensitive mutations causing arrest of embryogenesis in Caenorhabditis elegans have been mapped. The mutations define nine genes ( emb-1 to emb-9) on four chromosomes. The functions of six genes seem to be required exclusively for embryogenesis. Mutants in these genes have no other detectable phenotype at the permissive (16°C) or nonpermissive (25°C) temperature. The function of the other three genes is also required for postembryonic development. As shown by progeny tests for parental effects, for seven genes, maternal gene expression is necessary and sufficient for normal embryogenesis; for one gene, emb-2, either maternal or zygotic expression is sufficient; for one gene, emb-9, zygotic expression is necessary and sufficient. The high proportion of emb genes with maternal expression is consistent with the model of intracellular preprogramming of the egg of C. elegans ( U. Deppe, E. Schierenberg, T. Cole, C. Krieg, D. Schmitt, B. Yoder, and G. von Ehrenstein, 1978; Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 75, 376–380). Two developmental stages have been defined by temperature-shift experiments: (1) the normal execution stage indicating the time of execution of the normal event at the permissive temperature; (2) the defective execution stage indicating the time of the execution of an irreversible defect at the nonpermissive temperature. The classes of mutants defined by the progeny tests have corresponding execution stages, but the maternal necessary and sufficient class is subdivided into mutants executing during oogenesis or embryogenesis.

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