Mutations in the gene
dig-1 cause defects in the sensory processes of several types of ciliated head sensory neurons in C. elegans. Mutant processes deviate from their usual straight paths and sometimes fail to reach their normal destinations in the nose. Experiments with a temperature sensitive mutation showed that
dig-1 acts during embryogenesis and first larval stages. This phenotype suggests that
dig-1 plays an adhesive role during development and maintenance of the sensory nervous system. Recent analysis has shown that longitudinal processes of several additional types of neurons in the worms body also show abnormal fasciculation patterns in
dig-1 mutants. In addition, maintenance of axon position of neurons in the ventral nerve cord is affected (See Abstract by Benard et al.)
dig-1 maps to a region on chromosome III that contains K07E12.1, which is predicted to encode a giant secreted member of the immunoglobulin superfamily. We have shown that two
dig-1 alleles have mutations in this gene. In addition, RNAi using K07E12.1 sequence generated animals with a mutant sensory process phenotype closely resembling that of
dig-1 alleles. Finally, an array containing the complete K07E12.1 sequence (kind gift of R. Proenca and E. Hedgecock) rescued the sensory process defects of
dig-1(
n1321). Thus, we conclude that K07E12.1 is the
dig-1 gene. The DIG-1 predicted protein has several similarities to hyalectan proteoglycans, including N-terminal immunoglobulin domains, a highly repetitive middle region, and C-terminal domains involved in adhesion. In vertebrates, glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are attached to the repetitive core region of proteoglycans at serine residues that are part of a consensus sequence. One of the most severe
dig-1 alleles is a missense mutation (Ser to Phe) in a sequence in the repetitive region similar to the vertebrate GAG attachment consensus. The severity of the missense mutation suggests that it may destroy an important glycosylation site in the protein.