The rays are sensory organs used by the male to guide his search for the vulva during mating. Nine bilateral pairs of finger-like rays extend from the lateral sides of the tail, all embedded in a cuticular fan. There is extensive connectivity between the neurons of different rays, suggesting ray activity is highly integrated. Rays are required for the first step in mating, contact response (CR), in which the male responds to hermaphrodite contact by placing his tail on her surface in preparation for the vulva search. The two neurons of each ray are ciliated and males carrying mutations in cilia component genes (e.g.
osm-6,
osm-1) have strong CR defects. For example, only 50% of
osm-1 males exhibit CR and only after several tail encounters with hermaphrodites. CR defects are largely responsible for the low fertility of cilia mutant males. We are currently developing a screen for suppressors of cilia mutant infertility to identify genes that regulate CR. In contrast,
osm-12 (
bbs-7) males have near-wild type fertility. Interestingly, we find that
osm-12 is expressed in ray neurons suggesting that it functions redundantly in these cells. We are currently developing a screen for mutations that render
osm-12 males mating-defective. Such mutations should define factors that function analogously to
osm-12 in rays or are required for other aspects of ray function. Ablation studies by Liu and Sternberg (1995) showed that the V-rays (ray pairs 1-6) function redundantly in CR. We are currently using several approaches to determine which neurons within V rays are required. These include ray neuron-specific rescue of cilia mutants and activation of specific ray neurons through stimulation of heterologous receptors. We are also attempting to define the muscle groups that effect the postural changes associated with CR. Behavioral analyses of males ablated for blast cell M (which lack all sex muscles) and
mab-23 mutants (defective in a subset of sex muscles) indicate that ventral sex muscles are critical for tail placement. Interestingly these muscles are directly innervated by V-ray neurons (Male Wiring Project; Wormatlas). We are using muscle-expressed G-CaMP to visualize the sequence of muscle activation during CR.