We have continued to characterize ray loss mutants in order to identify all genes necessary for male tail peripheral sense organ development. We group these genes into two general classes on the basis of their phenotypes: EARLY GENES are required for events leading to the generation of ray cell groups, and LATE GENES are involved in the assembly of the ray cell groups into rays and the subsequent function of the rays. The genes are provisionally grouped as follows, judging by the severity of the mutant phenotypes and pending lineage analysis. EARLY GENES
bx66ts males exhibit grossly abnormal tail morphology and the absence of lateral alae at the nonpermissive temperature of 25 C. Hermaphrodites grown at 25 C also have abnoqmal alae and are sterile. At 16 C, both males and hermaphrodites are morphologically wild type. The TSP of
bx66ts is from the Ll stage onwards, thus
bx66ts may be an allele of a gene required for all lateral epidermal (seam) cell divisions, including those that divide to produce the ray cell groups.
bx40ts 1 is sterile at 25 C, and exhibits a maternal effect, even for the Mab phenotype, which resembles
mab-9(
el245)11 (club tail phenotype) at 25 C.
bx68ts 111 is also a maternal effect mutation that results in variable ray loss; hermphrodites grown at 25 C are Egl.
bx27ts 1 is a mutation that results in variable ray loss and swollen bursa at all temperatures.
bx27ts also confers a temperature sensitive lethal phenotype. Development arrests at the stage at which the animals are shifted from permissive (16 C) to nonpermissive temperature (25 C).
mab-24(
e2169)111 results in variable V5 and V6- derived (rays 1-6) ray loss and ray mispositioning. Both sexes are Unc; animals are forward coilers and are slightly uncoordinated when backing. LATE GENES
mab-22(bxS9ts)111 appears to affect the assembly of the rays from the constituent ray cell groups. bxS9ts results in extensive ray loss at 25 C, but not at 16 C. The TSP corresponds to the time of structural cell-cuticle association (papilla formation) just prior to morphogenesis. Lineage analysis and immunofluorescence visualization of hypodermal cell boundaries with the monoclonal antibody, MH27 ( provided by R. Waterston) show no defects in division pattern, cell morphology, or cell movements up until the point of papilla formation. When papillae do form, often very thin processes are attached to the cuticle instead of rays. EM reconstructions of sectioned animals will identify the nature of the thin processes.