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Jennifer Tenlen Postdoc Competition between cells to join the
germline? Sexually-reproducing
animals produce germ cells, totipotent cells able to give rise to
entire organisms. A key question in germ cell research is how this
totipotency is regulated. In many animals, including mammals,
germ cells are specified late in embryogenesis by cell-cell
interactions, but the signals that specify germ cell fate in such cases
are not understood. We have developed the tardigrade Hypsibius dujardini (pictured at
right) as a model system for comparative studies in germline
development. Previous work in our lab has suggested that cells in an
equivalence group may be germ cell precursors. These cells have the
same potential cell fates, but only one cell is chosen stochastically
to internalize and become a candidate germ cell, while the other
divides at the embryo surface and adopts an alternate fate. These
observations suggest that cells may compete to enter the germline. I am
identifying and characterizing germ cells in H. dujardini, and I am working on
developing methods to disrupt gene function by RNA interference to
further address this issue. These studies may provide insight
into how cells can compete to enter the germline, and may provide a
system for long-term study of the evolutionary consequences of such
competition.More about tardigrades
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