We used agarose gel electrophoresis of PCR-amplified fragments of
unc-93 to identify ENU-induced deletions. 4 of 30 strains screened (13%) contained deletions, ranging in size from 78 bp to ~700 bp. One deletion (
lr9/12) removes the transcription start site. Two deletions (
lr34 and
lr28) cause frame-shifts. These deletions, in addition to a nonsense allele (
lr87) and two splice site mutants (
lr116 and
lr97), presumably function as null alleles, accounting for the suppression of
unc-93(
e1500). One allele (
lr81) is a small (78 bp) in-frame deletion. The remaining missense alleles encode a variety of amino acid changes, several of which might disrupt membrane-spanning domains. Non-radioisotopic single-stranded conformational polymorphisms (cold SSCP) located putative point mutations induced by ENU. Dideoxy sequencing was used to identify the base-pair changes in 13 alleles. Eight novel missense alleles, one direct reversion allele, one nonsense allele, two splice junction mutations, and one 1-bp deletion were characterized. Sequencing of four novel missense alleles confirmed that each strain contained only one ENU-induced mutation. Intrigued by the novel missense suppressor alleles of
unc-93(
e1500), we are assaying the expression of these alleles using reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The possible effects of mutations on Unc-93 expression and function will be discussed.