For many genes in C. elegans, the absence of a mutant phenotype may reflect functional redundancy with another gene, perhaps one that is not obviously related in structure and function. Redundancy can be seen for MEC-8, a putative RNA-binding protein that is required for processing of
unc-52 mRNA. Loss-of-function mutations in
mec-8 confer mechanosensory and chemosensory defects but not embryonic lethality. The combination of a
mec-8 loss-of-function mutation, however, with a viable mutation in any of five sym (synthetic lethal with
mec-8) genes (or with a viable allele of
unc-52, the prototype analysis for this study) results in embryonic or early larval lethality. Analysis of
sym-1 X demonstrated that it encodes a leucine-rich repeat protein that, in the absence of MEC-8, is required for attachment of body muscles to the cuticle; it has been suggested that
sym-1 overlaps in function with a gene whose mRNA needs to be processed by MEC-8 (Davies et al. 1999; Genetics 153: 117). With the aim of identifying the hypothesized
mec-8 target and other genes that overlap functionally with
sym-1, we have been screening for mutations that are synthetically lethal with
sym-1(
mn601). Numerous candidate sys mutations have been identified, and we are beginning to characterize them. We are interested in understanding the nature of the functional overlap between
sym-2 and
mec-8. Possibly
sym-2 acts in the same pathway as
sym-1, or it might act in a separate pathway that overlaps functionally with a different
mec-8-dependent pathway. Another possibility is that
sym-2 encodes an RNA processing factor that overlaps with MEC-8 in the processing of an essential gene transcript. We have achieved cosmid rescue of
sym-2 II. Fine-structure mapping placed
sym-2 between
let-23 on the right and on the left a DNA sequence dimorphism discovered in an Hawaiian strain that resides on cosmid T24B8. The cosmid T23G7 but not W07A12 fully rescued the
sym-2 synthetic lethality with
mec-8.