Mutations in nine exc genes, and in
let-4 ,
let-653 , and
sma-1 , cause the excretory canals to swell into fluid-filled cysts of varying size and placement. The
exc-7 allele
rh252 characteristically exhibits smaller septate cysts along the canal terminating in a bolus of cysts. The length of these mutant canals varies from about 1/3 to 1/2 the length of wild-type canals. Mutant worms also often exhibit a slightly deformed tail whip. We previously mapped the
exc-7 gene between the left ends of mnDf58 and mnDf59 on LGII, an area spanned by 13 cosmids. Both canal and tail whip phenotypes were rescued by microinjection of cosmid E02H1, in which GeneFinder predicts 10 genes. The position was narrowed by microinjection of cosmid restriction fragments, and located by microinjection of a PCR product containing the promoter and coding regions of the predicted gene F35H8.5. F35H8.5 encodes a homologue of the paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis HuD antigen. This protein and its homologues have been characterized in Drosophila, Xenopus, and mammals as RNA-binding proteins containing multiple 80-amino-acid RNA recognition motifs. The predicted EXC-7 protein is most closely homologous to Drosophila Elav14, which is expressed early in neuronal cell development. Although the excretory cell acts as the C. elegans osmoregulatory organ, it has many neuronal characteristics: It is an ectodermally-derived cell whose sister is a neuron; in addition, extension of canal processes requires neural guidance cues such as UNC-6, UNC-53, and UNC-73. Our previous electron micrographs (with Ed Hedgecock and Dave Hall) of canals in
exc-7 mutants show abnormal concentrations of endosomes at the tips of the cells, which could reflect abnormal accumulations of incorrectly processed RNA. Surprisingly, although the phenotype of ELAV mutants in other creatures shows strong neural defects, our RNAi results, as well as the phenotype of the
rh252 allele placed over a deficiency, suggest that the null phenotype shows strong effects in the excretory canal and the tail whip, with negligible effects on neuronal processes. We are currently making GFP constructs to identify the location of EXC-7 expression, and are sequencing the
rh252 mutation in order to understand the molecular basis of the Exc-7 phenotype.