To understand what genes and mechanisms are involved in morphogenesis we are studying the 4-celled tail tip (
hyp8-11). The cellular architecture of this structure is identical in both sexes until late L4 when the hyp cells fuse and retract in the male, changing the shape of the tail from pointy to round. In the hermaphrodites, these cells retain the pointy shape of the larval stages. Mutations at the
lep-1 locus result in a pointy ("leptoderan", Lep) tail tip in adult males without pleiotropic effects on morphology or behavior in either sex. Our data suggest that
lep-1 is required specifically for tail tip morphogenesis, although it might function redundantly elsewhere. Both TEM data and immunofluorescent staining with the MH27 antibody (which recognizes an epitope in belt adherens junctions) show that both fusion and retraction of the tail tip cells in
lep-1 mutants are delayed. This delay is especially pronounced for the most posterior cell,
hyp10, which sometimes fails to fuse altogether. These data are consistent with a trigger originating anterior to the tail tip and with a posteriad progression of fusions and changes in cell shape. Genetic analysis indicates that the two EMS-induced
lep-1 alleles (
bx37 and
bx42 ) are semidominant. Penetrance of the Lep phenotype for these alleles is 95%; expressivity is variable. The results of segmental aneuploid analysis suggest that expression of the phenotype is sensitive to dosage of the wild type allele and that our alleles are hypomorphic. Our transformation rescue and mapping experiments place the
lep-1 locus near
mec-8 on LGI. We are currently isolating the gene to characterize it and its product at the molecular level.