- shaker
Animals rotate back and forth around their longitudinal axes.
- pathogen release reduced
Infected animals exhibit a reduction in the release of pathogens back into the environment, compared to control.
- pathogen release variant
Infected animals exhibit variations in the process of releasing pathogens back into the environment, compared to control.
- endocytic recycling defective
Variations in the directed movement of membrane-bounded vesicles from recycling endosomes back to the plasma membrane where they are recycled for further rounds of transport, compared to control.
- reversion of swimming paralysis
Animals that exhibit paralysis (reduced thrashing) revert back to normal swimming behavior that can be tabulated as a reversion index (number revertants/number paralysis) and reversion probability (time in reversion/time after paralysis).
- missing gonad arms
Animals are missing one or both gonad arms, the normally U-shaped projections of the gonad that extend into the anterior or posterior of the animal and bends back towards the center of the animal.
- recycling endosome localization variant
Any variation in the subcellular localization of membrane bound organelles, known as recycling endosomes, that traffic material from early endosomes back to the plasma membrane of the cell, thereby recycling recently endocytosed material to be reused at the plasma membrane.
- endocytic transport defect
Animals exhibit defects in the directed movement of substances into, out of or mediated by the endosome, a membrane-bound organelle that trafficks material to different compartments of the cell or back to the plasma membrane for recycling.
- over retracted male tail
Adult males exhibit a truncated tail, often without a fan or have well-developed fans but squarish, truncated back ends compared to control. In C. elegans this is due to precocious male tail tip retraction beginning in the early L3 stage (normally retraction begins in the L4 stage). Condition can be lethal if the function of the anus is affected.