MYRF is required for lin-4 expression during late L1
A. Plin-4-GFP(maIs134) is not expressed in myrf-1(ju1121). The expression of the lin-4 transcriptional reporter in wild-type and myrf-1(ju1121) animals was examined at the early L1 (0h), late L1 (16h), and early L2 stages (21h).
B. The fluorescence intensity of the lin-4 transcriptional reporter (as shown in (A)) was quantified and presented as mean ± SEM (t-test, ****p < 0.0001).
C. The expression of the endogenous lin-4 transcriptional reporter, lin-4p::nls::mScarlet(umn84), is substantially reduced in myrf-1(ybq6) mutants. In contrast, there is no significant change in its expression in myrf-2(ybq42) mutants. Importantly, this reporter is not activated in the myrf-1; myrf-2 double mutants. The weak expression of the reporter can be visualized by decreasing the maximum display range. Such representation is available in Figure Supplement 3.
D. The fluorescence intensity of the lin-4 reporter, as illustrated in (C), was quantified and is presented as mean ± SEM. Statistical significance was determined using a t-test (****p < 0.0001; ns, not significant). The term ‘whole body’ refers to the region of interest (ROI) encompassing the entire body of the animal. This definition is consistently applied throughout this figure.
E. The lin-4 reporter (umn84) is not activated in myrf-1(ju1121) mutants, with the exception of a few pharyngeal nuclei. The expression of this reporter in both wild-type and myrf-1(ju1121) animals was examined at various developmental stages: early to mid L1 (6 hours), late L1 (14 hours), and early L2 (21 hours). Due to the strong expression of the reporter in the wild type, the maximum display range has been increased to prevent signal saturation. The adjusted display range is indicated in the intensity scale adjacent to the images.
F. The fluorescence intensity of the lin-4 reporter, as depicted in (E), was quantified and is presented as mean ± SEM. Statistical significance was assessed using a t-test (****p < 0.0001). For quantification of the lin-4 reporter in head neurons and pharyngeal cells, refer to Figure Supplement 3.
G. The lin-4 reporter (umn84) is completely inactive in pan-1(gk142) mutants. These mutants and their wild-type controls were examined at the early L2 stage (21 hours). Images with a decreased maximum display range are available in Figure Supplement 3.
H. The fluorescence intensity of the lin-4 reporter, as shown in (G), was quantified and is presented as mean ± SEM. Statistical significance was determined using a t-test (****p < 0.0001).
I. The abundance of mature lin-4 miRNAs in wild-type and myrf-1(ju1121) animals was examined at the early L1 (0h), late L1 (16h), and early L2 stages (21h) using qPCR analysis with probes specifically detecting lin-4 microRNA. Each data point represents relative fold change of each sample comparing to the wild type Early L1 sample within one set of experiment. The data represent three biological replicates. Statistics used t-test. *p < 0.05, ***p < 0.001.