How gene networks regulate the development of sexually dimorphic adult structures remains largely unknown. We address this question in the male tail tip of Caenorhabditis elegans, a relatively simple developmental model. The L4 male tail undergoes a remodeling event known as Tail Tip Morphogenesis (TTM). During TTM, the four tail tip cells fuse, change shape, and migrate anteriorly, generating a rounded adult tail in males. In hermaphrodites, these same four cells do not undergo TTM and tails remain pointed. Prior work showed that the DM-domain transcription factor DMD-3 is required and sufficient for TTM. The aim of this work is to uncover "effector" genes that function downstream of DMD-3 to power TTM. To identify DMD-3 targets specifically in male tail tips, we used laser-capture microdissection to isolate tail tips from wild type males, hermaphrodites and
dmd-3(-) larval males and conducted tissue-specific RNASeq on pooled tail tips. Differential expression analyses yielded 561 differentially expressed genes, many of which are likely to be direct and indirect targets of DMD-3. To identify bona fide DMD-3-regulated genes, we are analyzing the expression pattern of transcriptional reporters in wild type and mutant tail tips and determining the loss-of-function phenotypes for a subset of these candidate genes. To distinguish direct versus indirect DMD-3-regulated genes we are also conducting a ChIP-seq experiment with tagged DMD-3. Finally, we are incorporating known interactions for TTM candidate genes to develop a draft interaction network. Our results will provide a draft for the gene regulatory network governing a postembryonic, sexually dimorphic morphogenetic process.