Abstract
Transgenes are highly susceptible to gene silencing in the C. elegans germline. Here, we examine the expression of the nuclear Argonaute protein NRDE-3 , comparing two GFP::NRDE-3 strains, one constructed by bombardment and one by CRISPR. We found that the GFP::NRDE-3 strain constructed by bombardment displays transgene silencing in germline and early embryos and that NRDE-3 expression can be restored in a rde-3 mutant, which disrupts the RNAi pathway. This finding reveals that NRDE-3 is not a soma-specific Argonaute protein and is, in fact, expressed in the proximal germline and early embryos.