In C. elegans, body size may be regulated by the nervous system. Lewis and Hodgkin initially reported that cilium-defective mutants such as
che-2 and
che-3 are smaller than wild-type animals. A smaller body size is also observed in other cilium-defective mutants and in the
tax-4 mutant (
tax-4 encodes a cGMP-gated channel that is necessary for chemosensation). Furthermore, DBL-1/CET-1 TGF-b, which is involved in body size regulation, is expressed in neurons. These observations suggest that if an animal cannot sense an environmental cue such as food, body size may be reduced through altered neural activity. Such regulation may be useful if a smaller body is economical. Recently Apfeld and Kenyon reported that sensory cues also regulate aging of C. elegans. In order to analyze the putative neural regulation of body size, we isolated suppressor mutants of the
che-2 small body size phenotype (chb). 15,000 haploid genomes were screened, yielding 28 candidates. These suppressor mutants do not suppress the dye-filling defect of
che-2, but suppress the small body size of
che-2. Some of these suppressors show the same body size with or without the
che-2 mutation in the background. Such mutants may result from defects downstream of sensory signals. Nine strains of this category are being mapped using the snipSNP method (Wicks and Plasterk). One of these,
chb-1, maps to the left arm of chromosome IV and may be allelic with
odr-9/egl-4.
odr-9/egl-4 maps to the same region.
chb-1 has the chemotaxis defect to diacetyl that is found in
odr-9/egl-4.
chb-1 and
odr-9/egl-4 both have a slightly larger body than wild type. We have mapped
chb-1 to a reigion that is less than 100kb and are attempting to rescue with cosmids covering this region.