del-1 ( de generin- l ike) encodes a protein that is a member of the DEG/ENaC superfamily. Reporter fusions to
del-1 suggest that this protein is expressed in the V class of motor neurons (Neuron, 18: 107-119) and in SABVR and SABVL (David Miller pers. comm.). No degeneration-causing mutations in
del-1 have been reported, and in fact there are no known mutations in this gene.
del-1 is expressed in many of the same cells as another degenerin,
unc-8 . Null alleles of
unc-8 cause subtle defects in locomotion, most notably there is a decrease in both the wavelength and amplitude of the worm tracks. We have postulated that both UNC-8 and DEL-1 are components of a stretch-sensitive ion channel in the motor neurons that modulates the sinusoidal movement of the worm. We screened a mutagenized C. elegans library for deletions within the
del-1 coding region, and isolated a 1380 base deletion,
del-1(
bz33) . This deletion begins at residue 256 just after the first cysteine-rich domain of the DEL-1 protein, and extends into the 12th intron. The mutant allele could at best produce a truncated protein with just one transmembrane domain. Our initial look at this mutant suggests
del-1(
bz33) does not have the same locomotion defect as
unc-8(lf) . Crosses of this allele with both gain-of-function and loss-of-function
unc-8 alleles may help to answer questions about the role of these degenerins in nematode locomotion and proprioception.