We have taken a genetic approach to identify molecules involved in
neurotransmission. We identified several previously unidentified genes
in a behavioral screen for mutants defective in synaptic
function. Among these was ric-5(n1337). When touched on the head,
ric-5(n1337) mutants move backwards in a jerky, uncoordinated fashion,
and frequently coil. ric-5 maps to the cluster of LG III. To obtain
putative null alleles of ric-5, a noncomplementation screen was
conducted to generate additional alleles. Approximately 7000 EMS
mutagenized genomes were screened, and we recovered 7 new alleles of
ric-5. We mapped the position of ric-5 to the right of mec-14 and to
the left of lin-39. Several other mutations resembling the ric-5
phenotype mapped to this same region. osm-13(n1602) (Josh Kaplan and
Anne Hart, personal communication) mapped to this interval and we
demonstrated that n1337 and n1602 failed to complement. Carl Johnson
mapped ric-1(e239) to this interval, and we demonstrated that e239 and
n1337 failed to complement. In light of these data, ric-5 has now been
renamed ric-1. Jim Rand's laboratory has isolated 19 mutations in
ric-1, bringing the total number of ric-1 alleles to
28. Microinjection of cosmid pools spanning this region weakly rescue
the coiling phenotype of ric-1.
Todd W. Harris, PhD
(harris@cshl.org)
$Id: abstract_boiler.shtml,v 1.1.1.1 2005/10/18 18:15:29 todd Exp $
$Id: abstract_boiler.shtml,v 1.1.1.1 2005/10/18 18:15:29 todd Exp $