In zebrafish, maternally produced vasa (vas) transcripts become targeted to the cleavage planes of early embryos and subsequently incorporated into the primordial germ cells (PGCs). Zygotic vas transcription occurs from the onset of gastrulation. Here, we report on the characterisation of the zebrafish vas locus. The gene consists of 27 exons, spans about 25kb, and contains two CpG-rich regions. We have used vas regulatory regions to establish transgenic zebrafish lines expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) in their PGCs. Maternally encoded vas::EGFP transcripts and VAS::EGFP protein segregate with the PGCs during embryogenesis. We find that the maternally deposited vas::EGFP transcripts are stable during embryogensis at least up to 50h of development. Vas::EGFP transcripts could not be detected in embryos that inherit the transgene from males, most likely due to the lack of one or more regulatory elements required for early zygotic expression. We show that vas::EGFP transcripts become enriched to the cleavage planes in early embryos, a finding that supported an RNA localisation signal localised within the vas region of these transcripts.
In Drosophila, the RNA helicase VASA (VAS) is required for both germ line formation and oocyte differentiation. While the murine VAS homologue is required for spermatogenesis, it is dispensable for germ line formation. The molecular basis for this apparently dual role of VAS in germ line ontogeny is, however, unclear. Recent evidence indicates that fish, like flies, employs VAS both in early and late stages of the germ line development and that there is a sex-linked differential expression of splice variants. We show here that the longer of two splice variants of zebrafish vas is transiently downregulated in the germ line around the time when the germ cells reach the developing gonad. Using transgenic vas::EGFP fish lines, which allow us to distinguish between male and female individuals, we show that the long splice variant reappears in both sexes at around day 25 and is subsequently downregulated during male gonadal development. Our data further suggest that there is a switch from maternal to zygotic expression of the long splice variant of vas as sexual dimorphic development commences.
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