Abstract
We are studying five interacting genes involved in the regulation or coordination of muscle contraction in Caenorhabditis elegans. A distinctive ``rubber-ban'' muscle-defective phenotype was previously shown to result from rare altered-function mutations in either of two of these genes, unc-93 and sup-10. Null mutations in sup-9, sup-10, sup-18 or unc-93 act as essentially recessive suppressors of these rubber-band mutations. In this work, we identify three new classes of sup-9 alleles: altered-function rubber-band, partial loss-of-function and dominant-suppressor. The existence of rubber-band mutations in sup-9, sup-10 and unc-93 and the suppression of these mutations by null mutations in any of these three genes suggest that these proteins are required at the same step in muscle contraction. Moreover, allele-specific interactions shown by the partial loss-of-function mutations indicate that the products of these interacting genes may physically contact each other in a multiple subunit protein complex. Finally, the phenotypes of double rubber-band mutant combinations suggest that the rubber-band mutations affect a neurogenic rather than a myogenic input in excitation-contraction coupling in muscle.
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Selected References
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