Sodium fluoride (NaF) is thought to affect the metabolism of calcium ion and various phosphate compounds as well as signal transducing systems proteins 150 g/ml isolated involving guanine nucleotide binding It delays the growth of C. elegans at and kills it at 400 g/ml. We have eleven fluoride-resistant mutants that hree genes:
flr-1X,
flr-2 V, and
flr-3 IV. All mutants in two of the genes,
flr-1 and
flr-3, are resistant to 400 g/ml NaF. However, they are small, grow only slowly and have small brood-size even in the absence of NaF. Although only one allele has been obtained in the third gene
flr-3, it shows a phenotype distinct from the mutants in
flr-1 and
flr-3. Namely, it is only partially resistant to 400 g/ml NaF, its growth rate and brood-size in the absence of NaF are almost normal, and it has slightly dumpy shape. Interest ingly, the
flr-3 mutat ion suppresses the slow-growing phenotype (but not fluoride-resistance) of
flr-1 and
flr-3. Moreover, it is possible to isolate revertants of
flr-1 and
flr-3 by selecting for worms that grow as fast as wild-type worms. Thus, genetic studies on the flr mutants seem to reveal a group of molecules important in the normal growth of C.elegans. We have cloned the
flr-1 gene and are cloning the
flr-3 gene by transposon tagging. Sequencing studies are now in progress.