Morphogenesis involves coordinated cell migrations and cell shape changes that generate tissues and organs. Cell adhesion and the cytoskeleton are important for morphogenesis, but the signaling pathways involved remain poorly understood. As genes required for morphogenesis often have earlier roles in development, temperature-sensitive embryonic lethal (TS-EL) alleles are useful tools for investigating morphogenesis. From a collection of ~1,000 TS-EL mutants, we have classified the terminal phenotypes of 191 with normal early embryogenesis, after upshifts from the permissive (15 deg C) to the restrictive temperature (26 deg C) at the L4 stage, to identify 79 with highly penetrant elongation defects. We identify causal mutations using whole genome sequencing (WGS) and genetic complementation tests. So far, we have identified 30 alleles representing 21 genes. Many of these genes likely regulate gene expression globally with roles in cell fate specification (e.g.
glp-1, which encodes a Notch receptor involved in blastomere specification) or differentiation (e.g.
chaf-1, which encodes a chromatin assembly factor subunit), while others appear to be weak alleles of cell division genes (e.g.
zwl-1, which encodes a kinetochore protein). To identify mutants that are specifically defective in morphogenesis, we upshifted mutant embryos just prior to the bean stage, after most cell division, cell fate specification and differentiation has occurred, and identified 12 with penetrant elongation defects. These include two with causal mutations in
rib-1 and
rib-2, which encode heparin sulfate synthesis proteins that regulate morphogenesis in other organisms, although how post-translational sugar modifications influence morphogenesis is still unclear. We are now using WGS to identify genes for 6 more of these 12 late-upshift mutants. We also are characterizing morphogenetic defects in fixed mutant embryos, using antibodies against epidermal cell membrane proteins to assess cell shape dynamics. Our long term goal is to advance our understanding of morphogenesis by identifying more genes that influence this process.