COLOR CODE FOR ced-3 Anterior VC
Oct. 18, 2012
DHH interpretation
This wild type adult
hermaphrodite was prepared for study of cell fates of “undead cells” which
failed to undergo programmed cell death in a ced-3 (n717) mutant background. This mutant allele, isolated in the Horvitz
lab, was first described by Ellis and Horvitz in a Worm Breeder’s Gazette article
in Jan 1982 and in their paper in 1986.
The TEM study of the adult mutant was conducted at MRC, and aimed to
follow the exact cell fates of many “undead cells” (JG White et al., 1991). This study encompassed four animals, one for
the hermaphrodite nose, one for the RVG and anterior ventral cord, another for
anterior ventral cord, and one for the posterior ventral cord and tail
cells.
Figure 4b from the White et
al paper comes from this specimen, ced-3 Anterior VC, which covers the anterior ventral nerve
cord. Among the interesting features
within the print set is the “undead cell” P2aap, which is marked as Blue 27. This
cell has adopted a VC-like neuronal cell fate, with a long posterior axon
traveling close to other VC axons, near the dorsal edge of the ventral cord
fascicle, close to the muscle plate. This
cell many synapses, including several gap junctions on its cell body and a
series of NMJs to the muscle arms of the ventral bodywall
muscles (typical of normal VC neurons).
The NMJ shown in Figure 4b corresponds to print #348 in this series.
The anterior ventral cord is
vaguely disorganized, such that the command interneurons are less distinctive in size, and many axons
from the motor neurons are slightly out of position near the muscle plate. This complicates the task of assigning exact
cell identities in many cases.
The print series has two
consecutive portions covering about 680 serial images; first are prints #1A to
135A, followed by prints #1-546. Print
1A is the most anterior, print 546 the most posterior. Not every section was photographed, so the
actual thin section series was even longer.
References
HM Ellis
and HR Horvitz (1982) On Death and Dying in C. elegans. WBG
Vol. 7, No 1, p 67.
HM Ellis and HR Horvitz
(1986) Genetic control of programmed cell death in the nematode. Cell 44:
817-829.
JG White, E Southgate and N
Thomson (1991) On the nature of undead cells in the
nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Phil Trans R Soc Lond
B 331: 263-71.
Color codes (all taken directly from John
White’s notes)
Blue numbers
27 “VC-like” P2aap undead
cell
28 AS?
29 VD3
30 DB
31 DA
32 VA
33 VB
34 VC1
Green numbers
12 VC?
13 VC?
14 VD?
15 AVA
16
17 AVA
18 DD?
19 AVB