Ryanodine receptor channels regulate contraction of striated muscle by gating the release of calcium ions from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. Ryanodine receptors are expressed in excitable and non-excitable cells of numerous species, including the nematode C. elegans. Unlike vertebrates, which have at least three ryanodine receptor genes, C. elegans has a single gene encoded by the
unc-68 locus. We show that
unc-68 is expressed in most muscle cells, and that the phenotypic defects exhibited by
unc-68 null mutants result from the loss of
unc-68 function in pharyngeal and body-wall muscle cells. The loss of
unc-68 function in the isthmus and terminal bulb muscles of the pharynx causes a reduction in growth rate and brood size.
unc-68 null mutants exhibit defective pharyngeal pumping (feeding) and have abnormal vacuoles in the terminal bulb of the pharynx.
unc-68 is required in body-wall muscle cells for normal motility. We show that UNC-68 is localized in body-wall muscle cells to flattened vesicular sacs positioned between the apical plasma membrane and the myofilament lattice. In
unc-68 mutants, the vesicles are enlarged and densely stained. The flattened vesicles in body-wall muscle cells thus represent the C. elegans sarcoplasmic reticulum. Morphological and behavioral phenotypes of
unc-68 mutants suggest that intracellular calcium release is not essential for excitation-contraction coupling in C. elegans.