Mutations in the cilium structure genes, including
osm-1 ,
daf-10 ,
che-11 ,
che-13 and osm 6 , lead to defects in osmotic avoidance, chemotaxis, response to dauer-inducing signals and uptake of fluorescent dyes by the amphid and phasmid neurons. Analysis of these mutants by electron microscopy (Perkins et al. Dev. Biol. 117 :456-487; Albert et al. J. Comp. Neurol. 198 :435-451) demonstrated structural defects in their sensory cilia, which were severely shortened. To further our understanding of processes involved in the assembly of sensory cilia, we are continuing to characterize the cilium structure genes. Analysis of the location of a functional OSM-6::GFP (Collet et al. Genetics 148 :187-200) in several cilium structure mutants has indicated that none of the above mutants appears to affect the expression
osm-6::gfp ; however, each affects the localization of OSM-6::GFP within the amphid neurons. We have also cloned
osm-1 ,
daf-10 ,
che-11 and
che-13 . The carboxyl-terminal half of OSM-1 is predicted to be composed primarily of a repeating motif of approximately 44 amino acids, with unknown function. Interestingly, both DAF-10 and CHE-11 contain weakly similar repeats. The amino acid sequences of OSM-1, CHE-11 and CHE-13 (as well as OSM-6) have significant similarity to partial peptide sequences of polypeptides that are hypothesized to form protein complexes involved in intraflagellar transport (IFT) in Chlamydomonas (Cole et al. J. Cell. Biol. 141 :993-1008). The IFT complexes are proposed to move along the outer doublet microtubules of the axoneme, next to the plasma membrane, and to be involved in the assembly of the motile flagella of Chlamydomonas . Database searches indicate that these proteins also have vertebrate homologues. Thus these proteins may have widely conserved function in transporting components required for assembly and/or function of both motile and non-motile cilia and flagella.