The C. elegans Notch Receptors, GLP-1 and LIN-12, mediate a variety of cell interactions over the course of development. Activation of Notch involves release of the membrane-tethered intracellular domain through the action of a complex protease known as secretase. The four conserved components of secretase were initially identified through genetic work with C. elegans: presenilins (
sel-12 and
hop-1),
aph-1,
aph-2, and
pen-2, each of which can generate Notch-type mutant phenotypes. We are studying the effects of a C-terminal truncation [
aph-1(
zu147)] that removes a hydrophilic tail from the multipass-membrane protein APH-1. Although this tail is not evolutionarily conserved, it appears to play an important role in APH-1 function in C. elegans, as
aph-1(
zu147) homozygous worms show a strong, albeit leaky, maternal-effect lethality (only 6% of progeny survive to late larval stages). These worms are more sensitive than wt worms to reductions in presenilin levels, as survival drops to 0% in an
aph-1(
zu147)
sel-12(
ty11) double mutant, whereas the
sel-12(
ty11) mutation in a wt
aph-1 background causes no significant maternal-effect lethality. To address whether the hydrophilic tail of APH-1 is critical for protein stability or subcellular localization, we have generated polyclonal antiserum directed against the middle portion of APH-1 so that we can directly compare full length versus truncated protein levels in embryonic cells. We are also using yeast two-hybrid analysis to probe for direct interactions between the APH-1 hydrophilic tail and other hydrophilic portions of secretase and other known components of the Notch signaling pathway. Results from these experiments will be presented. As a complementary approach, we have identified extragenic suppressors that compensate for the missing APH-1 C-terminal tail, thus suppressing the maternal-effect lethality caused by the
zu147 mutation. We have pursued one of these suppressors,
sao-1(
ik1) (suppressor of aph-one), which shows strong recessive, and allele-specific suppression of
aph-1(
zu147). We have found that the
sao-1(
ik1) mutation can also suppress (although only weakly) the Egl phenotype of
sel-12 partial loss-of-function alleles. The fact that the
aph-1(
zu147) mutation and
sel-12 mutations can be suppressed by the same extragenic suppressor suggests that removal of the APH-1 C-terminal tail is functionally analogous to reducing presenilin function. We are further testing this model by assaying the ability of
sao-1(
ik1) to suppress other leaky Notch-signaling mutants, and reciprocally by assaying the ability of a presenilin suppressor,
sel-10, to suppress the
aph-1(
zu147) mutation.