Egg-laying behavior in C. elegans is regulated by multiple neurotransmitters, including acetylcholine and serotonin. Agonists of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors such as nicotine and levamisole stimulate egg-laying; however, the genetic and molecular basis for cholinergic neurotransmission in the egg-laying circuitry is not well understood. We have examined the egg-laying phenotypes of eight known levamisole resistance genes which may mediate or regulate nicotinic receptor activity in the egg-laying neuromusculature. Five "strong" levamisole resistance genes, including
unc-63,
unc-74, and the nicotinic receptor subunit genes
unc-29,
unc-38, and
lev-1, were essential for the stimulation of egg-laying by levamisole. In the absence of drug these mutants retained the characteristic biphasic pattern of egg-laying and caused only subtle shifts in the timing of egg-laying behavior. Worms mutant for two or three of these nicotinic receptor genes also had a generally wild-type pattern of egg-laying. These genes appear to encode components of a levamisole-sensitive nicotinic receptor that promotes egg-laying but is not necessary for egg-laying muscle contraction.
unc-29 and
unc-38 mutants were also hypersensitive to the stimulation of egg-laying by serotonin, suggesting that nicotinic receptors might negatively regulate serotonin response pathways in the egg-laying muscles or neurons. Three "weak" levamisole resistance genes,
lev-8,
lev-9, and
lev-10, had effects on egg-laying that were distinct from those of the levamisole receptor genes. Phenotypic analysis indicated that
lev-8,
lev-9, and
lev-10 may encode regulatory molecules that control the functional activity of nicotinic receptors, since their loss of function attenuates nicotinic receptor function without seeming to eliminate the receptors themselves.