Worm Breeder's Gazette 8(2): 24

These abstracts should not be cited in bibliographies. Material contained herein should be treated as personal communication and should be cited as such only with the consent of the author.

Mutant Sensory Axons in C. elegans

J. Culotti, E. Hedgecock, L. Perkins

We have identified mutations in 5 new unc genes that lead to 
foreshortened or misguided PHA and PHB axons as determined by FITC 
uptake.  PHA and PHB are bilaterally symmetric pairs of sensory 
neurons with cell bodies in the right and left lumbar ganglia of the 
tail.  They have dendrites that end in the phasmid sensilla and axons 
that extend forward into the pre-anal ganglion (PAG) at the posterior 
end of the ventral nerve cord.  Mutants unc(ev404)I, unc(ev416)I, and 
unc(ev411)V are similar to mutants of unc-33 IV, unc-44 IV, unc-51 V, 
and unc-76 V (Hedgecock et al, WBG 7#1 p. 70) in that the phasmid 
axons accurately find the ventral nerve cord but terminate prematurely,
stopping just as they enter the posterior end of the pre-anal 
ganglion.  The terminals of these neurons appear to be abnormally 
enlarged.  In two mutants unc(ev400)X and unc(ev410)1 the phasmid 
axons frequently fail to reach the ventral nerve cord and instead run 
in various lateral positions.  In cases where the phasmid axons do 
reach the ventral nerve cord, however, the axons appear to grow 
forward into the PAG normally.  Thus, there are two predominant (and 
some minor) classes of unc(ev400) animals.
1) Animals in which the phasmid axons from right and left find the 
ventral nerve cord and grow forward into the PAG.  These animals look 
like wild type in phasmid axon morphology.
Animals in which phasmid axons from one side fail to find the 
ventral cord and are misdirected, while those on the other side find 
the cord and grow forward into the PAG (i.e.  appear normal).
In the unc-76 unc(ev400) double, two analagous classes of animals 
are found.
1) Animals in which the phasmid axons from right and left find the 
ventral cord but fail to grow forward into the PAG (equivalent to the 
unc-76 phenotype).  2) Animals in which phasmid axons on one side fail 
to find the ventral cord, while those on the other side find the cord. 
Surprisingly, in these one-sided animals those phasmid axons that do 
find the ventral cord are able to grow forward into the PAG despite 
the unc-76 mutation.
Apparently the unc-76 phenotype is not always expressed in axons 
that reach the PAG in one-sided animals, presumably because the PAG is 
different in these individuals (for example, the axons from 
contralateral PHA and PHB homologs are absent).