Mouse pre-meiotic germline cysts contain fusome-like structure dependent on Dazl that mediates cyst fragmentation and oocyte development

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Abstract

Mouse female primordial germ cells undergo five synchronous, incomplete mitotic divisions, and send each resulting germline cyst into meiosis to fragment and produce 4-6 oocytes and 24-26 supportive nurse cells. How oocytes are specified, linked appropriately to nurse cells and enabled to acquire high quality organelles and cytoplasm on a massive scale remains unclear. We identified an asymmetric Golgi, ER and microtubule-associated structure, “Visham,” similar to the Drosophila fusome. Starting as the EMA granule, Visham distributes asymmetrically in cyst cells and enriches in future oocytes with Pard3, and Golgi-endosomal UPR (unfolded protein response) genes. Transient spindle remnants rich in stable acetylated microtubules link early cyst cells for part of each cell cycle. Cysts sometimes develop a gap in these microtubules beginning at the 8-cell stage that predicts programmed cyst fragmentation into six-cell cysts of similar structure. Visham persists during meiosis where it mediates Pard3-dependent polarity, Xbp1-dependent adaptive UPR, and organelle transfer to the Balbiani body. In DAZL mutants, cysts still form, but polarity and oocyte production are blocked.

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