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1.
About 200 temperature-sensitive mutants of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans have been isolated. At restrictive temperature, the mutants are blocked in the reproductive life cycle. They have been placed into six broad categories based on their defective phenotypes. The six categories are: (1) mutants blocked in embryogenesis; (2) mutants defective in gonadogenesis; (3) mutants defective in spermatogenesis; (4) mutants that accumulate at an intermediate growth stage; (5) mutants that produce sterile adult progeny; (6) mutants that have a temperature-sensitive morphological defect that interrupts the reproductive life cycle. The critical times of temperature sensitivity have been measured using temperature-shift experiments. Most of the gonadogenesis and spermatogenesis mutants are temperature sensitive during the period of cellular differentiation rather than proliferation. The temperature responses of the gonadogenesis and zygote-defective mutants indicate a common association between functions in gonadogenesis and early embryogenesis. Many of the mutants placed in different categories share other temperature-sensitive phenotypes upon close examination. This implies that many of the functions required for development are general metabolic reactions under increased demand during differentiation and embryogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
Eleven temperature-sensitive mutations causing arrest of embryogenesis in Caenorhabditis elegans have been mapped. The mutations define nine genes (emb-1 to emb-9) on four chromosomes. The functions of six genes seem to be required exclusively for embryogenesis. Mutants in these genes have no other detectable phenotype at the permissive (16°C) or nonpermissive (25°C) temperature. The function of the other three genes is also required for postembryonic development. As shown by progeny tests for parental effects, for seven genes, maternal gene expression is necessary and sufficient for normal embryogenesis; for one gene, emb-2, either maternal or zygotic expression is sufficient; for one gene, emb-9, zygotic expression is necessary and sufficient. The high proportion of emb genes with maternal expression is consistent with the model of intracellular preprogramming of the egg of C. elegans (U. Deppe, E. Schierenberg, T. Cole, C. Krieg, D. Schmitt, B. Yoder, and G. von Ehrenstein, 1978; Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA75, 376–380). Two developmental stages have been defined by temperature-shift experiments: (1) the normal execution stage indicating the time of execution of the normal event at the permissive temperature; (2) the defective execution stage indicating the time of the execution of an irreversible defect at the nonpermissive temperature. The classes of mutants defined by the progeny tests have corresponding execution stages, but the maternal necessary and sufficient class is subdivided into mutants executing during oogenesis or embryogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
We have used standard tests to investigate the nature of gene expression of a new set of temperature-sensitive mutants defining 30 emb genes (essential for embryogenesis) in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. The mode of gene expression as determined by progeny tests for parental effects divides the genes into four classes. For 18 genes maternal gene expression is necessary and sufficient for normal embryogenesis; for 2 genes zygotic expression is necessary and sufficient; for 7 genes either maternal or zygotic expression is sufficient; for 3 genes both maternal and zygotic expression are necessary. One mutant displayed partial paternal sufficiency. The results of temperature-shift experiments define two “execution stages,” corresponding to the limits of the temperature-sensitive period (TSP), and indicate the nature and the time of action or synthesis of the gene products. Most of the maternally expressed genes have very early execution stages indicating translation before fertilization, but some are temperature sensitive late in embryogenesis. Early execution stages for 2 zygotically necessary genes demonstrate that the zygotic genome can be active in the earliest stages of embryogenesis. All taken together, the mode of gene expression, TSP, and arrest stage (terminal phenotype) allow us to classify functionally and begin to order the genes essential for embryogenesis. The results indicate a preeminent role for maternal genes and gene products in embryogenesis, in agreement with the results of others.  相似文献   

4.
Genetic tests for parental effects were performed on 24 temperature-sensitive embryonic-lethal mutants of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. For 21 of these mutants, maternal expression of the wild-type allele is sufficient for embryonic survival, regardless of the embryo's genotype. For 11 of these 21 mutants, maternal expression of the wild-type allele is necessary for embryonic survival (strict maternals). For the remaining 10, either maternal or embryonic expression is sufficient for survival (partial maternals). One mutant shows a paternal effect; that is, a wild-type extragenic sperm function appears to rescue homozygous mutant embryos. Similar parental-effect tests were performed on 11 larval-lethal mutants. In 4 mutants, 1 of which blocks as late as the second larval stage after hatching, maternal contributions still can rescue mutant larvae. The remaining 3 embryonic lethals and 8 larval lethals show no parental effects; that is, zygotic expression of the wild-type allele is necessary and sufficient for embryonic survival. Temperatureshift experiments on embryonic-lethal embryos showed that all but 1 of the strict maternal mutants are temperature sensitive only before gastrulation. One of the partial maternal mutants is temperature sensitive prior to gastrulation, suggesting that some zygotic genes can function early in embryogenesis. At the nonpermissive temperature, 7 of the strict maternal mutants either show cleavage abnormalities in early divisions or stop cleavage at less than 100 cells, or both.  相似文献   

5.
After fertilization, the development of a zygote depends upon both gene products synthesized by its maternal parent and gene products synthesized by the zygote itself. To analyze genetically the relative contributions of these two sources of gene products, several laboratories have been isolating two classes of mutants of Drosophila melanogaster: maternal-effect lethals and zygotic lethals. This report concerns the analysis of two temperature-sensitive mutants, OX736hs and PC025hs, which were isolated as alleles of a small-disc mutant, l(3)1902. These alleles are not only zygotic lethals, but also maternal-effect lethals. They have temperature-sensitive periods during larval life and during oogenesis. Mutant larvae exposed continuously to restrictive temperature have small discs. One-or two-day exposures to the restrictive temperature administered during the third larval instar lead to a homeotic transformation of the midlegs and hindlegs to the pattern characteristic of the forelegs. Mutant females exposed to the restrictive temperature during oogenesis produce eggs that can develop until gastrulation, but do not hatch.--The existence of these mutants, and one that was recently described by another group, implies that there may be a class of genes, heretofore unrecognized, whose products are synthesized during oogenesis, are essential for embryogenesis and are also synthesized during larval stages within imaginal disc cells.  相似文献   

6.
The Role of S. CEREVISIAE Cell Division Cycle Genes in Nuclear Fusion   总被引:28,自引:4,他引:24       下载免费PDF全文
Forty temperature-sensitive cell division cycle (cdc) mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were examined for their ability to complete nuclear fusion during conjugation in crosses to a CDC parent strain at the restrictive temperature. Most of the cdc mutant alleles behaved as the CDC parent strain from which they were derived, in that zygotes produced predominantly diploid progeny with only a small fraction of zygotes giving rise to haploid progeny (cytoductants) that signalled a failure in nuclear fusion. However, cdc4 mutants exhibited a strong nuclear fusion (karyogamy) defect in crosses to a CDC parent and cdc28, cdc34 and cdc37 mutants exhibited a weak karyogamy defect. For all four mutants, the karyogamy defect and the cell cycle defect cosegregated, suggesting that both defects resulted from a single lesion for each of these cdc mutants. Therefore, the cdc 4, 28, 34 and 37 gene products are required in both cell division and karyogamy.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The Nodal-related subgroup of the TGFbeta superfamily of secreted cytokines regulates the specification of the mesodermal and endodermal germ layers during gastrulation. Two Nodal-related proteins - Squint (Sqt) and Cyclops (Cyc) - are expressed during germ-layer specification in zebrafish. Genetic sqt mutant phenotypes have defined a variable requirement for zygotic Sqt, but not for maternal Sqt, in midline mesendoderm development. However a comparison of phenotypes arising from oocytes or zygotes injected with Sqt antisense morpholinos has suggested a novel requirement for maternal Sqt in dorsal specification. In this study we examined maternal-zygotic mutants for each of two sqt alleles and we also compared phenotypes of closely related zygotic and maternal-zygotic sqt mutants. Each of these approaches indicated there is no general requirement for maternal Sqt. To better understand the dispensability of maternal and zygotic Sqt, we sought out developmental contexts that more rigorously demand intact Sqt signalling. We found that sqt penetrance is influenced by genetic modifiers, by environmental temperature, by levels of residual Activin-like activity and by Heat-Shock Protein 90 (HSP90) activity. Therefore, Sqt may confer an evolutionary advantage by protecting early-stage embryos against detrimental interacting alleles and environmental challenges.  相似文献   

9.
Simpson P 《Genetics》1983,105(3):615-632
Maternal-zygotic interactions involving the three genes dorsal (dl), twist (twi) and snail (sna) are described. The results suggest that all three are involved in the process by which the dorsoventral pattern of the Drosophila embryo is established. First, the lethal embryonic mutant phenotypes are rather similar. In homozygous twi or sna embryos invagination of the ventral presumptive mesodermal cells fails to occur, and the resulting embryos are devoid of internal organs. This is very similar to the dominant phenotype described for dl; in the case of dl, however, the effect is a maternal one dependent on the mutant genotype of the female. Second, a synergistic interaction has been found whereby dominant lethality of twi- or sna-bearing zygotes is observed in embryos derived from heterozygous dl females at high temperature. The temperature sensitivity of this interaction permitted definition of a temperature-sensitive period which is probably that of dl. This was found to extend from approximately 12 hr prior to oviposition to 2–3 hr of embryogenesis. A zygotic action for the dl gene in addition to the maternal effect was revealed by the finding that extra doses of dl+ in the zygotes can partially rescue the dominant lethality of heterozygous twi embryos derived from heterozygous dl females. Two possible interpretations of the synergism are considered: (1) twi and sna are activated in the embryos as a result of positional signals placed in the egg as a consequence of the functioning of the dl gene during oogenesis and, thus, play a role in embryonic determination. (2) The gene products of dl+ and twi + (or sna+) combine to produce a functional molecule that is involved in the specification of dorsoventral pattern in the early embryo.  相似文献   

10.
The developmental profile of acid phosphatase-1 activity in Drosophila melanogaster indicates that this lysosomal gene-enzyme system (Acph-1, 3–101.1) is responsible for ca. 90% of the low-pH nucleotidase activity throughout development. The enzyme is present at particularly high levels during embryogenesis. It is shown with electrophoretic variants and null mutants of acid phosphatase-1 that virtually all of the embryonic enzyme is maternal in origin and is made during oogenesis. The enzyme exists in several isozymic forms at fertilization, and all but one of these forms disappear during early embryogenesis. Detectable maternal enzyme persists until the third larval instar stage. Crosses between females homozygous for a null allele and wild-type males show the zygotic Acph-1 gene activation occurs by at least 9 hr after oviposition.  相似文献   

11.
In the three maternal effect lethal mutant strains of D. melanogaster described in this report, the homozygous mutant females produce defective eggs that cannot support normal embryonic development. The embryos from these eggs begin to develop for the first 2 hr after fertilization in an apparently normal way, forming a blastula containing a cluster of pole cells at the posterior end and a layer of syncytial blastoderm nuclei. During the subsequent transition from a syncytial to a cellular blastoderm, cell formation in the blastoderm is either partially or totally blocked. In mutant mat(3)1 no blastoderm cells are formed, indicating that there are separate genetic controls for pole cells and blastoderm cells. The other two mutants form an incomplete cellular blastoderm in which certain regions of the blastoderm remain noncellular. The noncellular region in mutant mat(3)3 is on the posterior-dorsal surface, covering about 30% of the total blastoderm. In mutant mat(3)6 blastoderm cells are formed only at the anterior and posterior ends, separated by a noncellular region that covers about 70% of the total blastoderm. The selective effects on blastoderm cell formation in the three mutants emphasize the importance of components present in the egg before fertilization for the transition from a syncytial to a cellular blastoderm.The genes defective in the three mutants are essential only for oogenesis and not for any other period of development, as indicated by a strict dependence of the lethal phenotypes on the maternal genotypes. Heterozygous embryos from the eggs of homozygous mutant females die, whereas homozygous mutant embryos from the eggs of heterozygous females develop into viable adults.One of the mutants, mat(3)3, has a temperature-sensitive phenotype. Homozygous mat(3)3 females maintained at a restrictive temperature of 29°C show the lethal maternal effect. However, at a permissive temperature of 20°C the females produce viable adult progeny. The temperature-sensitive period in mat(3)3 females occurs during the last 12 hr of oogenesis, consistent with the maternal effect phenotype of the mutant.  相似文献   

12.
Salmonella typhimurium cells infected by temperature-sensitive mutants in gene 9 of bacteriophage P22 at the restrictive temperature (39 °C) fail to accumulate functional tail spike protein. We report here studies of the inactive mutant tail spike polypeptide chains synthesized at 39 °C by temperature-sensitive mutants at 15 different sites of gene 9. For all 15 mutants, the gene 9 polypeptide chains were synthesized at 39 °C at rates similar to wild type. The mutant polypeptide chains were stable within the infected cells.The inactive polypeptide chains were tested for three functions displayed by the mature tail spike protein: irreversible binding to phage heads, endorhamnosidase activity, and reaction with anti-tail antibody. The 15 mutant proteins that accumulated at 39 °C lacked all three functions. Since the amino acid substitutions do not affect these functions of the mature protein, the mutant polypeptide chains synthesized at 39 °C have a conformation very different from the wild type, and different from the same proteins when matured at 30 °C. The fact that amino acid substitutions throughout the 76,000 Mr polypeptide chain prevent all three functions suggests that the mutations prevent the correct folding of the gene 9 polypeptide chain at restrictive temperature. Thus, these mutations identify sites in the polypeptide chain critical for protein maturation.Many of the mutant proteins could be activated in the absence of new protein synthesis by shifting infected cells from restrictive to permissive temperature before cell lysis. For these mutants, the immature chains accumulating at high temperature must be reversibly related to intermediates in protein folding or subunit assembly.  相似文献   

13.
The sex-linked temperature-sensitive mutation shibirets of Drosophila melanogaster shows a maternal effect causing embryonic lethality at 29°C. The maternal influence is due to gene action autonomous to the ovary. Embryos carrying the paternally derived wild-type gene can survive at 29°C but only if heat pulses are begun at least 9 hr after oviposition. The paternal rescue is presumably due to zygotic gene action at this locus beginning part way through embryogenesis. A maternal wild-type genome, however, can produce shi embryos that have sufficient shi+ product to support embryogenesis up to the hatching stage even at 29°C.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Out of 25,000 EMS-treated third chromosomes examined, ten dominant temperature-sensitive (DTS) lethal mutations which are lethal when heterozygous at 29 degrees C but survive at 22 degrees C were recovered. Seven of the eight mutations mapped were tested for complementation; these mutants probably define eight loci. Only DTS-2 survived in homozygous condition at 22 degrees C; homozygous DTS-2 females expressed a maternal effect on embryonic viability. Two of the mutant-bearing chromosomes, DTS-1 and DTS-6, exhibited dominant phenotypes similar to those associated with Minutes. Each of the seven mutants examined exhibited a characteristic phenotype with respect to the time of death at 29 degrees C and the temperature-sensitive period during development. Only DTS-4 exhibited dominant lethality in triploid females.  相似文献   

16.
We have isolated 440 mutants of Salmonella typhimurium that show temperature-sensitive growth on complex medium at 44 degrees. Approximately 16% of the mutations in these strains have been mapped to 17 chromosomal locations; two of these chromosomal locations seem to include several essential genes. Genetic analysis of the mutations suggests that the collection saturates the genes readily mutable to a ts lethal phenotype in S. typhimurium. Physiological characteristics of the ts lethal mutants were tested: 6% of the mutants can grow at high temperature under anaerobic conditions, 17% can grow when the medium includes 0.5 M KCl, and 9% of the mutants die after a 2-hr incubation at the nonpermissive temperature. Most ts lethal mutations in this collection probably affect genes required for growth at all temperatures (not merely during high temperature growth) since Tn10 insertions that cause a temperature-sensitive lethal phenotype are rare.  相似文献   

17.
Artificial mitotic gynogenesis, a chromosome set manipulation, is applied to provide the homozygous progeny with only maternal inheritance. Here, gynogenetic development was induced in the sterlet Acipenser ruthenus L. (Acipenseridae) by activation of the eggs originating from albino females with the UV-irradiated spermatozoa from wild-coloured males, followed by the heat shock applied to suppress the first mitotic division in the haploid zygotes. All experimentally obtained gynogenetic offspring possessed recessive albino coloration. Moreover, the genetic verification, based on three microsatellite DNA markers, confirmed the only maternal inheritance in the albino progeny. Cytogenetic screening enabled identification of the aneuploids, haploids, diploids, triploids, tetraploids and mosaic individuals among the gynogenetic larvae that hatched from the eggs subjected to the heat shock. Furthermore, 40% of the larvae from the haploid variants of the research that were not exposed to the temperature shock showed the diploid chromosome number. A variation of the ploidy level observed in the gynogenetic sterlets may be the consequence of the spontaneous polyploidisation that occurred in the haploid zygotes. Moreover, observation during embryogenesis showed varied stages of eggs development and the asynchronous cell cleavages that may have resulted in the chromosomal disturbances observed in the gynogenetic sterlets here.  相似文献   

18.
Type IV collagen is a major component of basement membranes. We have characterized 11 mutations in emb-9, the α1(IV) collagen gene of Caenorhabditis elegans, that result in a spectrum of phenotypes. Five are substitutions of glycines in the Gly-X-Y domain and cause semidominant, temperature-sensitive lethality at the twofold stage of embryogenesis. One is a glycine substitution that causes recessive, non–temperature-sensitive larval lethality. Three putative null alleles, two nonsense mutations and a deletion, all cause recessive, non–temperature-sensitive lethality at the threefold stage of embryogenesis. The less severe null phenotype indicates that glycine substitution containing mutant chains dominantly interfere with the function of other molecules. The emb-9 null mutants do not stain with anti–EMB-9 antisera and show intracellular accumulation of the α2(IV) chain, LET-2, indicating that LET-2 assembly and/or secretion requires EMB-9. Glycine substitutions in either EMB-9 or LET-2 cause intracellular accumulation of both chains. The degree of intracellular accumulation differs depending on the allele and temperature and correlates with the severity of the phenotype. Temperature sensitivity appears to result from reduced assembly/secretion of type IV collagen, not defective function in the basement membrane. Because the dominant interference of glycine substitution mutations is maximal when type IV collagen secretion is totally blocked, this interference appears to occur intracellularly, rather than in the basement membrane. We suggest that the nature of dominant interference caused by mutations in type IV collagen is different than that caused by mutations in fibrillar collagens.  相似文献   

19.
V G Mitrofanov 《Ontogenez》1974,5(5):485-491
The influence of temperature (17 and 31 degrees) on the maternal effect of mutation Puffed (Pu) in Drosophila hybrids has been studied. In the hybrids female D. littoralis +/+ x male D. virilis Pu/Pu, the stage of formation of black ring on anterior spiracles in the 3rd larval instar is sensitive to 31 degrees. In the hybrids female D. virilis Pu/Pu x male D. littoralis +/+, the expression of Pu gene manifests the maternal effect and as a result, two temperature-sensitive stages are found. The first one--onset of embryogenesis (2 to 4 hrs). At the temperature 17 degrees, the penetrance of Pu increases. The second stage is sensitive to 31 degrees and coincides with the period of black rings formation on anterior spiracles in the 3rd laval instar. It has been shown that at least two genetic systems take part in the formation of this feature. One group of genes controls the maternal effect and is sensitive to low temperature in the early embryogenesis of the hybrids female D. virilis x male D. littoralis. The second one--Pu gene and its modifiers--is active during the 2nd half of the 3rd larval instar and is heat-sensitive.  相似文献   

20.
Eleven marker enzymes which accumulate during discrete stages of development in Dictyostelium discoideum were followed in two independent temperature-sensitive mutant strains. Strain TS2 has a temperature-sensitive period during aggregation and remains as a smooth lawn at the nonpermissive temperature (27°C). It develops normally at 22°C. Strain DTS6 has a temperature-sensitive lesion in the post-aggregation stage and fails to form slugs at 27°C. Early enzymes accumulate in these strains at the nonpermissive temperature but late stage-specific enzymes fail to accumulate at 27°C. The pattern of accumulation of specific enzymes in these and other morphological mutants defines a linear dependent pathway of at least eight steps which determines temporal differentiation in this organism. Development in Dictyostelium is also dependent on environmental cues which determine the onset of differentiation and the preparation for culmination.  相似文献   

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