Article

  • The EMBO Journal (2008) 27, 1085 - 1096
  • doi:10.1038/emboj.2008.32

Published online: 28 February 2008

Spindle assembly checkpoint gene mdf-1 regulates germ cell proliferation in response to nutrition signals in C. elegans

Sonoko Watanabe1, Takaharu G Yamamoto1 and Risa Kitagawa1

  1. Department of Molecular Pharmacology, St Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN, USA

Correspondence to:

Risa Kitagawa, Department of Molecular Pharmacology, St Jude Children's Research Hospital, 332 N Lauderdale St Memphis TN 38105, USA. Tel.: +1 901 495 4058; Fax: +1 901 495 4290; E-mail: risa.kitagawa@stjude.org

Received 3 September 2007; Accepted 8 February 2008


When newly hatched Caenorhabditis elegans larvae are starved, their primordial germ cells (PGCs) arrest in the post-S phase. This starvation-induced PGC arrest is mediated by the DAF-18/PTEN–AKT-1/PKB nutrient-sensing pathway. Here, we report that the conserved spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) component MDF-1/MAD1 is required for the PGC arrest. We identified 2 Akt kinase phosphorylation sites on MDF-1. Expression of a non-phosphorylatable mutant MDF-1 partially suppressed the defect in the starvation-induced PGC arrest in L1 larvae lacking DAF-18, suggesting that MDF-1 regulates germ cell proliferation as a downstream target of AKT-1, thereby demonstrating a functional link between cell-cycle regulation by the SAC components and nutrient sensing by DAF-18–AKT-1 during post-embryonic development. The phosphorylation status of MDF-1 affects its binding to another SAC component, MDF-2/MAD2. The loss of MDF-2 or another SAC component also caused inappropriate germ cell proliferation, but the defect was less severe than that caused by mdf-1 hemizygosity, suggesting that MDF-1 causes the PGC arrest by two mechanisms, one involving MDF-2 and another that is independent of other SAC components.

  • Keywords:

    • C. elegans,
    • nutrition signals,
    • spindle assembly checkpoint