The secondary vulval lineages display specific orientations, visible in the spatial arrangement of adherent and nonadherent cells, in the direction of cell migration, and in the shapes of individual cells during vulval morphogenesis. Previous work showed that a signal from the gonad influences vulval cell orientation, and that
lin-18 mutations cause partly penetrant vulval misorientation. The results suggested that
lin-18 mediates production of or response to an orienting signal produced by the gonad. When tested in a sensitized background,
lin-18 also influences vulval induction:
lin-45raf(
sy96) mutants display approximately 60% of the wild type level of vulval differentiation, while raf;
lin-18 double mutants display only 30% of the wild type level of vulval differentiation. Preliminary evidence suggests that mutant raf increases the penetrance of the
lin-18 orientation defect as well. We have obtained
lin-18 rescue by germline transformation. Two overlapping cosmids rescue the
lin-18 orientation defect. The genomic sequence predicts two genes in the region of overlap: one encodes a novel predicted protein, the other encodes a predicted receptor tyrosine kinase that displays 60% amino acid sequence identity to a small subfamily of mammalian predicted receptor tyrosine kinases. The normal role of the mammalian homologs is not known. We have subcloned each predicted gene and are currently testing their ability to rescue the
lin-18 orientation defect.