The let-7 microRNA (miRNA) regulates stemness in animals ranging from worms to humans. However, the cause of the dramatic vulval rupturing phenotype of let-7 mutant C. elegans has remained unknown. Consistent with the notion that miRNAs function by coordinately tuning the expression of many targets, bursting may result from joint dysregulation of several targets, possibly in the epidermis. Alternatively, overexpression of LET-60/RAS, a key vulva development gene and a phylogenetically conserved target of let-7, may be responsible. Here, we show that let-7 functions in the vulval-uterine system to ensure vulval integrity but that regulation of most targets of let-7, including LET-60/RAS, is dispensable. Using CRISPR-Cas9 to edit endogenous let-7 target sites, we found that regulation of LIN-41/TRIM71 alone is necessary and sufficient to prevent vulval rupturing. Hence, let-7 does not function to reduce gene expression noise broadly, but to direct vulval development through extensive regulation of a single, defined target.
The juvenile-to-adult (J/A) transition, or puberty, is a period of extensive changes of animal body morphology and function. The onset of puberty is genetically controlled, and the let-7 miRNA temporally regulates J/A transition events in nematodes and mammals. Here, we uncover the targets and downstream pathways through which Caenorhabditis elegans let-7 controls male and female sexual organ morphogenesis and skin progenitor cell fates. We find that let-7 directs all three processes by silencing a single target, the post-transcriptional regulator lin-41. In turn, the RNA-binding protein LIN41/TRIM71 regulates these processes by silencing only four target mRNAs. Thus, by silencing LIN41, let-7 activates LIN-29a and MAB-10 (an early growth response-type transcription factor and its NAB1/2-orthologous cofactor, respectively) to terminate progenitor cell self-renewal and to promote vulval integrity. By contrast, let-7 promotes development of the male sexual organ by up-regulating DMD-3 and MAB-3, two Doublesex/MAB-3 domain–containing transcription factors. Our results provide mechanistic insight into how a linear chain of post-transcriptional regulators diverges in the control of a small set of transcriptional regulators to achieve a coordinated J/A transition.
The heterochronic pathway controls temporal patterning during Caenorhabditis elegans larval development. The highly conserved let-7 microRNA (miRNA) plays a key role in this pathway, directing the larval-to-adult (L/A) transition. Hence, knowledge of the genetic interactome of let-7 has the potential to provide insight into both control of temporal cell fates and mechanisms of regulation and function of miRNAs. Here, we report the results of a genome-wide, RNAi-based screen for suppressors of let-7 mutant vulval bursting. The 201 genetic interaction partners of let-7 thus identified include genes that promote target silencing activity of let-7, seam cell differentiation, or both. We illustrate the suitability of our approach by uncovering the mitotic cyclin-dependent kinase CDK-1 as a downstream effector of let-7 that affects both seam cell proliferation and differentiation, and by identifying a core set of candidate modulators of let-7 activity, which includes all subunits of the condensin II complex. We propose that the genes identified in our screen thus constitute a valuable resource for studies of the heterochronic pathway and miRNAs.
Development of multicellular organisms relies on faithful temporal control of cell fates. InCaenorhabditis elegans, the heterochronic pathway governs temporal patterning of somatic cells. This function may be phylogenetically conserved as several heterochronic genes have mammalian orthologues, and as the heterochronic let-7 miRNA and its regulator LIN28 appear to time the onset of puberty in mice and humans. Here, we have investigated how let-7 promotes the transition to adulthood in C. elegans. We find that let-7 controls each of three relevant processes, namely male and female sexual organ morphogenesis as well as changes in skin progenitor cell fates, through the same single target, lin-41. LIN41 in turn silences two pairs of targets post-transcriptionally, by binding and silencing their mRNAs. The EGR-type transcription factor LIN-29a and its co-factor, the NAB1/2 orthologous MAB-10, mediate control of progenitor cell fates and vulval integrity. By contrast, male tail development depends on regulation of the DM domain-containing transcription factors DMD-3 and MAB-3. Our results provide mechanistic insight into an exemplary temporal patterning pathway, demonstrate that let-7 -LIN41 function as a versatile regulatory module that can be connected to different outputs, and reveal how several levels of post-transcriptional regulation ultimately achieve effects through controlling transcriptional outputs.
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