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A family of C. elegans VASA homologs control Argonaute pathway specificity and promote transgenerational silencing

Siyuan Dai, Xiaoyin Tang, Lili Li, Takao Ishidate, Ahmet R. Ozturk, Hao Chen, Altair L. Dube, Yonghong Yan, Meng‐Qiu Dong, En-Zhi Shen, Craig C. Mello

2022Cell Reports24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Germline Argonautes direct transcriptome surveillance within perinuclear membraneless organelles called nuage. In C. elegans, a family of Vasa-related Germ Line Helicase (GLH) proteins localize in and promote the formation of nuage. Previous studies have implicated GLH proteins in inherited silencing, but direct roles in small-RNA production, Argonaute binding, or mRNA targeting have not been identified. Here we show that GLH proteins compete with each other to control Argonaute pathway specificity, bind directly to Argonaute target mRNAs, and promote the amplification of small RNAs required for transgenerational inheritance. We show that the ATPase cycle of GLH-1 regulates direct binding to the Argonaute WAGO-1, which engages amplified small RNAs. Our findings support a dynamic and direct role for GLH proteins in inherited silencing beyond their role as structural components of nuage.

Topics & Concepts

ArgonauteRasiRNAGene silencingBiologyCell biologyPiwi-interacting RNARNA interferencemicroRNAGermlineGeneticsRNA silencingRNAGeneGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model OrganismsPhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsCircadian rhythm and melatonin
A family of C. elegans VASA homologs control Argonaute pathway specificity and promote transgenerational silencing | Litcius