Heterchronic control of molting (WP2357)

Caenorhabditis elegans

Under good conditions, C. elegans enters and exits four larval stages before becoming a fertile adult. Each developmental stage is punctuated with a molt that entails the shedding of the larval cuticle and the generation of a completely new one. It has been shown that each cuticle is unique in its composition. Molting is a carefully timed process that needs to be coordinated with development, new cuticle synthesis, and cuticle shedding. Mutations in a set of genes called heterochronic genes regulates the timing development and the molts and result in precocious or retarded development of parts of the animals that aren't synchronized with the the animals' life stage.

Authors

Karen Yook , Alex Pico , and Ulas Babayigit

Activity

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Cited In

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Organisms

Caenorhabditis elegans

Communities

Annotations

Pathway Ontology

regulatory pathway

Participants

Label Type Compact URI Comment
lin-4 GeneProduct wormbase:WBGene00002993
LIN-28 GeneProduct wormbase:WBGene00003014
LIN-29 GeneProduct wormbase:WBGene00003015
LIN-14 GeneProduct wormbase:WBGene00003003

References

  1. A hierarchy of regulatory genes controls a larva-to-adult developmental switch in C. elegans. Ambros V. Cell. 1989 Apr 7;57(1):49–57. PubMed Europe PMC Scholia