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Article
Morphologically Defined Substages of Tail Morphogenesis in C. Elegans Males
Biology Faculty Publications
  • Karin Kiontke, New York University
  • Alyssa Woronik, Sacred Heart University
  • David H. Fitch, New York University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2024
Disciplines
Abstract

Background Sex-specific morphogenesis occurs in C. elegans in the vulva of the hermaphrodite and in the male tail during the last larval stage. Temporal progression of vulva morphogenesis has been described in fine detail. However, a similar precise description of male tail morphogenesis was lacking.

Results We here describe morphogenesis of the male tail at time points matching vulva development with special focus on morphogenesis of the tail tip. Using fluorescent reporters, we follow changes in cell shapes, cell fusions, nuclear migration, modifications in the basement membrane and formation of a new apical extracellular matrix at the end of the tail.

Conclusion Our analysis answers two open questions about tail tip morphogenesis (TTM) by showing that one of the four tail tip cells, hyp11, remains separate while the other cells fuse with each other and with two additional tail cells to form a ventral tail syncytium. This fusion begins early during TTM but is only completed towards the end of the process. This work provides a framework for future investigations of cell-biological factors that drive male tail morpogenesis.

Comments

This article is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review, January 2024.

DOI
10.1101/2024.01.11.575265
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Citation Information

Kiontke, K. C., Woronik, A., & Fitch, D. H. (2024). Morphologically defined substages of tail tip morphogenesis in C. elegan males. bioRxiv. Doi: 10.1101/2024.01.11.575265