Many previous studies of muscle assembly in the nematode C. elegans have shown that the rod domain of myosin heavy chain B (MHC B), encoded by the
unc-54 gene, is both necessary and sufficient for myosin and thick filament assembly. More recent studies have investigated the role of the myosin head domain in thick filament and sarcomere assembly. Four dominant nonsense mutations in the head domain of MHC B, which result in a muscle disruptive phenotype when the animals are viewed under polarized light, have been characterized. These four mutations are located close to the myosin rod/head junction in the
unc-54 suggesting that the presence of deformed myosin heads are toxic to normal muscle assembly (Pulak & Anderson, 1993). Four transgenic lines of worms, which contain truncated versions of the
unc-54 gene, have been created to test the hypothesis that myosin heads confer the disruptive muscle phenotype. The transgenic lines were constructed in a temperature-sensitive
smg-1 genetic background to allow conditional expression. RT-PCR detected mutant
unc-54 mRNA in the three transgenic lines examined. These animals have normal motility and do not show any reproductive defects. The results suggest either that the presence of mutant myosin has no effect in C. elegans striated muscle assembly or the truncated protein is not synthesized. To distinguish between these possibilities, we are constructing GFP and epitope-tagged versions of mutant myosin gene.