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1.
Summary Simultaneous selection of transformants fortrpE26 and a second unlinked marker ofB. subtilis in many cases yields double heterogenotic clones. Several chromosome areas analyzed in this way found to be involved in the diploid condition. Diploids for areas on the left hand side oftrpE26 on the map (and as near as thearo B locus) are in general unstable while stable merodiploids can be obtained for areas on the right hand side of this marker (as far as theilvA locus). Merozygotes for regions other than the aromatic segment are also formed by transformation of already diploid (stable and unstable) clones. Stable diploids give rise to new heterogenotes only for markers on the right hand side oftrpE26. Through reversion of untransformed markers in unstable and stable diploids it was found that these clones are homodiploid for loci situated at a long distance from (or between) the areas which were involved in the transformation. This indicates that the diploid state covers a continuous segment of the chromosome, the length of which can be determined. The segregation pattern of unstable multiple merodiploids suggests that exchange of genetic material must take place between the two homologous regions. The data presented are in agreement with the hypothesis that the merodiploids possess a very long duplication on their chromosome. In the case of the stable clones this duplication is shorter.  相似文献   

2.
Unstable merodiploid transductants may be observed among the progeny of certain generalized transductional crosses between complementing mutations in the histidine operon of Salmonella typhimurium. In the presence of a functional recombination system, these transductants are unstable and they segregate His? clones of both parental genotypes. The properties of these His+ transductants suggest that they contain tandem duplications of a region of DNA which includes the histidine operon, such that each copy of the duplication contains one of the two complementing mutations involved in the transduction. Transductional duplications have been observed from 14 pairs of his mutations, but only with complementing pairs of parental mutations. The length of duplicated material may be quite large: two duplications were found to include genetic markers ten minutes removed from the histidine operon on the Salmonella chromosomal map.These transductants appear to arise in a subpopulation of recipient cells which contain pre-existing tandem duplications of the histidine operon. As much as 0.01 to 0.1% of the cell population appears to be tandemly duplicated for a chromosomal region which includes the histidine operon.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Diploid prototrophs were obtained from protoplast fusion of Bacillus subtilis strains. They are unstable but upon further cultivation they stabilize retaining diploidy but are genetically inactive. It has been suggested that recombination between the parental chomosomes is involved in the production of stable prototrophs and recombinants. In this work the occurrence of this recombination was searched for by determining genetic linkages in transformation experiments. In prototrophs two alleles: hisH2 and trpE8 carried originally on each parental chromosome, were shown to be 48% co-transformable in a stable clone whereas they were only cotransformed in 10% of the unstable colonies. For Trp- recombinants (the most frequent type of a Leu- Met- Thr- x Ade- Ura- Trp- fusion pair) lysed protoplasts were used as donor DNA for the transformations. High values of co-transfer for Ura+ Met+ were obtained. These results confirm the occurrence of recombination in stable diploid clones, prototrophs or recombinants.  相似文献   

4.
Nontandem segmental duplications provide a useful alternative to conventional recombination mapping for determining gene order in a haploid organism such asNeurospora. When an insertional or terminal rearrangement is crossed by Normal sequence, a class of progeny is produced that have a precisely delimited chromosome segment duplicated. In such Duplication progeny, a recessive gene in the Normal-sequence donor chromosome may or may not be masked (“covered”) by its dominant wild-type allele in the translocation-sequence recipient chromosome. Coverage depends upon whether the gene in question is left or right of the rearrangement breakpoint. The recessive gene will be heterozygous and covered (not expressed) if its locus is within the duplicated segment, but it will be haploid and expressed if the locus is outside the segment. Not only genes but also centromeres can be mapped by means of duplications, because genes included in. the same viable duplication must reside in the same chromosome arm. - Numerous sequences in the current genetic maps ofN. crassa have been determined using duplications. Gene order in the albino region and in the centromere region of linkage group I provide examples. Over 50 insertional or terminal rearrangements are available from which nontandem duplications of defined content can be obtained at will; collectively these cover about 75% of the genome. - Intercrosses between partially overlapping chromosome rearrangements also produce Duplication progeny containing two copies of regions between the breakpoints. The 180 mapped reciprocal translocations and inversions include numerous overlapping combinations that can be used for duplication mapping.  相似文献   

5.
Previous workers have shown that intergeneric crosses between Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli produce a high proportion of merodiploid recombinants among the viable progeny. We have examined the unequal cross-over event that was responsible for a number of intergeneric merodiploids. The merodiploids that we studied were all heterozygous for the metB-argH interval and were the products of intergeneric conjugal crosses. We found that when the S. typhimurium donor had its transfer origin closely linked to metB and argH, all recombinants examined were merodiploid, and they generally arose as F-prime factors. Many of these F-prime factors had been created by recombination between flanking rrn genes in the donor. When the S. typhimurium Hfr transfer origin was more distant from the selected markers, quite different results were obtained. Depending on the donor, 19-47% of the recombinants that acquired the donor argH+ or metB+ genes were merodiploid for these loci, but none of the recombinants were F-prime. A majority of the merodiploids had a novel (nonparental) rrn gene, indicating that unequal recombination between nonidentical rrn genes was a prevalent mechanism for establishing the merodiploidy. Both tandem and nontandem duplications were found. Some of the merodiploids duplicated E. coli genes in addition to acquiring S. typhimurium genes. Some merodiploids contained the oriC region from each parent. Of a total of 118 intergeneric merodiploids characterized from all donors, 48 different genotypes were observed, and 38 of the 48 had one or more nonparental rrn operons.  相似文献   

6.
The replication order of markers was studied in Bacillus subtilis strains bearing the trpE26 mutation by the use of the density transfer technique. An important difference in this order was observed in comparison with that of strain 168 T-. All markers tested of a chromosome segment extending from trpD to ilvA replicated early, after purB6 and before thr-5. Two markers flanking this region, trpE8 and citK7, replicated late as usual. The results suggested that this segment was shifted in trpE26 strains to a region closer to the origin of replication. PBS-1-mediated transduction crosses corroborated this hypothesis and revealed the position of the translocated segment. (i) Linkage was demonstrated for markers in the segment (hisH2, tryA1, met B3, ilvA2) to thr-5 and ald; (ii) aroB2 and citK7 were found to be linked; and (iii) linkage of cysB3 to thr-5 was lost in trpE26 strains. These findings made it possible to account for the characteristics of the trpE26 mutation and to propose a model explaining the fact that all trpE26+ transformants or transductants are merodiploid. The model calls for fusion of two genetic elements: two independent chromosomes, or two arms of a replicating structure. The resulting chromosome bears a long tandem duplication. Most of the features of this system of merodiploid formation can be interpreted by use of this model: the segregation pattern of the diploids, the stabilization of the unstable clones, and the length of the duplicated region. A relatively stable diploid strain was also studied by the density transfer technique. The data show that it remained diploid for the region corresponding to the translocated segment and are in agreement with the structure predicted by the model.  相似文献   

7.
E. D. Jarvis  S. Cheng    R. Rudner 《Genetics》1990,126(4):785-797
Studies on the region upstream to ribosomal operon rrnD of Bacillus subtilis led to the characterization of two of the four chromosomal junctions involved in the rearrangements (a translocation and an inversion) of the strains carrying the trpE26 mutation. Genetic analysis, by integrative mapping, showed linkage of rrnD to cysB and hisA (both on segment A) in the trpE26-type strains. Physical analysis showed that the region upstream to rrnD is now linked to the trpE-ilvA chromosome segment as demonstrated by analyzing restriction site-polymorphism between 168 and trpE26-type strains. Similar experiments confirmed the previous genetic data on linkage in these areas in strains carrying novel rearrangements derived from the trpE26-type strains: stable merodiploids and inversions. The nucleotide sequence of the area 5' to rrnD in both types of strains (168 and trpE26), the region downstream of the citG gene and the region carrying the trpE26 mutation (made available to us by D. Henner) provided evidence for the molecular basis of the differences in structure, allowed the identification of the break points and revealed the presence of a polypurine region upstream to rrnD as seen in other systems in B. subtilis. No extensive homology was found between pairs of junctions so far sequenced. The models proposed by C. Anagnostopoulos for the role of DNA sequences of intrachromosomal homology involved in the transfer of the trpE26 mutation and the formation of novel arrangements require therefore reevaluation.  相似文献   

8.
Transformation experiments with Bacillus subtilis strains carrying trpE26 (the marker responsible for the detection of merodiploid clones after transformation or transduction) have established the precise position of this marker on the "aromatic region" of the chromosome, at the distal end of the anthranilate synthetase locus. Integration efficiency of the mutant allele (trpE26) seems to be very low. Co-transfer of markers situated on either side of it is almost nil when both donor and recipient carry this mutation. The "exclusion" of trpE26 does not, however, affect recombination frequencies for nearby markers. To explain these facts we considered the hypothesis of a preferential breakage of the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) at the trpE26 site or that of an insertion mutation. These studies have also demonstrated the establishment of physical linkage of a marker from the exogenote (hisH2) to a resident marker (tyrA1) in stable and unstable merodiploid clones, thus confirming integration of the donor DNA segment into a genetic structure of the recipient. Furthermore, duplication was shown in merodiploid clones (through reversion and transformation) for a locus of the recipient (tyrA) which was not involved in the initial transformation. This suggests that the diploid condition in this region extends beyond the transformed area. Interpretation of the genetic constitution of these partial diploids calls for postulation of the existence of long duplications, a second (incomplete) chromosome, or an episome-like element.  相似文献   

9.
When haploid yeast strains containing mitochondrial DNAs (mtDNAs) of different buoyant densities are mated, the resulting zygotes contain a mixed population of mitochondria and mitochondrial DNAs. During vegetative growth of diploid cells formed from such a cross between a petite strain with mtDNA of density 1.677 g cm?3 and a respiratory competent strain with mtDNA of density 1.684 g cm?3, mtDNAs with intermediate buoyant densities are obtained. Virtually all newly synthesized mtDNA in diploid ρ? progeny has the intermediate buoyant density. Therefore, within 2 generations of growth of the diploid cells, the intermediate buoyant density species predominate. In crosses between a respiratory competent strain and other petite strains with different values of genetic suppressiveness, it was found that the amount of recombination yielding mtDNAs of intermediate buoyant densities roughly parallels the degree of suppressiveness. Individual clones of respiratory deficient cells from such crosses were also isolated to confirm that stable mtDNAs with intermediate buoyant densities were obtained. Thus, it is apparent that some form of recombination takes place within the mtDNAs of yeast cells that results in stable mtDNA species.  相似文献   

10.
A strain of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has been investigated which, when mated with known wild-types, produces very few viable germination products and transmits its Mendelian markers to more than half of those products. Cytogenetic observations, fluorometric measurements of DNA and genetic data all suggest that the strain, d mt-ery-M3a sr-u-1 is a stable homozygous diploid. This strain has twice as many nuclear chromatin bodies at metaphase and twice as much DNA as its haploid progenitor, and the phenotypes of its meiotic progeny are consistent with predictions based on triploid meiosis. Data from crosses involving d mt-ery-M3a sr-u-1 and from crosses involving hybrid diploids indicate that the frequency of second division segregation increases in triploid zygotes and that mitotic segregation following triploid meiosis is a frequent event which may more often result from mitotic recombination than from chromosome loss.  相似文献   

11.
Salmonella strains harboring tandem chromosomal duplications have been identified following selection for expression of a histidine biosynthetic gene whose promoter is deleted. In such strains, tandem duplications fuse the selected his gene to “foreign” regulatory elements, thereby allowing gene expression. Selection is made for hisD+ activity in deletion strain hisOG203. Among the revertants, strains harboring tandem chromosomal duplications have been identified by a number of their properties. (1) Their HisD+ phenotype is genetically unstable. (2) Such instability is dependent on recombination (recA) activity. (3) Genetic tests demonstrate that these strains are merodiploid for large regions (up to 25%) of the Salmonella genome. (4) Recipient strains that inherit the HisD+ phenotype of these duplication-carrying revertants also inherit the donor's merodiploid state. (5) In certain revertants the functional hisD+ gene and the sequence which promotes merodiploid transductant formation are linked to chromosomal markers located far from the normal his region.Previous reports have concluded that the instability of strains isolated by this selection is due to translocation of the hisD+ gene to an extrachromosomal element (the pi-histidine factor). We believe that in all strains we have tested (33 independent isolates) instability can better be accounted for as due to tandem duplication events which permit expression of hisD. At least two mechanisms are responsible for duplication formation. One mechanism is dependent on recombination function and generates identical revertants having a duplication of 16% of the chromosome. A second mechanism operates independently of recombination activity; individual duplications produced by this process have variable endpoints.  相似文献   

12.
Duplications are often attributed to “unequal recombination” between separated, directly repeated sequence elements (>100 bp), events that leave a recombinant element at the duplication junction. However, in the bacterial chromosome, duplications form at high rates (10−3–10−5/cell/division) even without recombination (RecA). Here we describe 1800 spontaneous lac duplications trapped nonselectively on the low-copy F′128 plasmid, where lac is flanked by direct repeats of the transposable element IS3 (1258 bp) and by numerous quasipalindromic REP elements (30 bp). Duplications form at a high rate (10−4/cell/division) that is reduced only about 11-fold in the absence of RecA. With and without RecA, most duplications arise by recombination between IS3 elements (97%). Formation of these duplications is stimulated by IS3 transposase (Tnp) and plasmid transfer functions (TraI). Three duplication pathways are proposed. First, plasmid dimers form at a high rate stimulated by RecA and are then modified by deletions between IS3 elements (resolution) that leave a monomeric plasmid with an IS3-flanked lac duplication. Second, without RecA, duplications occur by single-strand annealing of DNA ends generated in different sister chromosomes after transposase nicks DNA near participating IS3 elements. The absence of RecA may stimulate annealing by allowing chromosome breaks to persist. Third, a minority of lac duplications (3%) have short (0–36 bp) junction sequences (SJ), some of which are located within REP elements. These duplication types form without RecA, Tnp, or Tra by a pathway in which the palindromic junctions of a tandem inversion duplication (TID) may stimulate deletions that leave the final duplication.  相似文献   

13.
A set of Escherichia coli K12 mutants, which carry a tandem duplication of the glyT purD region, have been analyzed. Three types of duplications have occurred repeatedly, and we show that they were generated by recombination between the ribosomal RNA gene, rrnE, which lies to one side of the glyT purD region and one of threerrn genes which occur as direct repetitions on the other side of this region. Characterization of these duplication mutants has involved the isolation of the duplicated material in the form of a DNA circle. Class I duplications, which extend from rrnE to rrnE, are 39,500 base-pairs long, class II duplications, which extend from rrnA to rrnE, are 164,000 base-pairs long, and class III duplications, which extend from rrnC to rrnE, are 258,000 base-pairs long.  相似文献   

14.
A Bacillus subtilis 168 strain carrying an inversion of about 1600kb-long chromosomal DNA was isolated. Physical and genetic analyses demonstrated that the inversion was generated as a result of homologous recombination between two homologous sequences integrated at the met and leuB loci. This is the first clear evidence of a large stable chromosomal inversion induced by homologous recombination in B. subtilis.  相似文献   

15.
David D. Perkins 《Genetics》1975,80(1):87-105
Heterokaryon (vegetative) incompatibility, governing the fusion of somatic hyphal filaments to form stable heterokaryons, is of interest because of its widespread occurrence in fungi and its bearing on cellular recognition. Conventional investigations of the genetic basis of heterokaryon incompatibility in N. crassa are difficult because in commonly used stocks differences are present at several het loci, all with similar incompatibility phenotypes. This difficulty is overcome by using duplications (partial diploids) that are unlikely to contain more than one het locus. A phenotypically expressed incompatibility reaction occurs when unlike het alleles are present within the same somatic nucleus, and this parallels the heterokaryon incompatibility reaction that occurs when unlike alleles in different haploid nuclei are introduced into the same somatic hypha by mycelial fusion.—Nontandem duplications were used to confirm that the incompatibility reactions in heterokaryons and in duplications are alternate expressions of the same genes. This was demonstrated for three loci which had previously been established by conventional heterokaryon tests—het-e, het-c and mt. These were each obtained in duplications as recombinant meiotic segregants from crosses heterozygous for duplication-generating chromosome rearrangements. The particular method of producing the duplications is irrelevant so long as the incompatibility alleles are heterozygous.—The duplication technique has made it possible to determine easily the het-e and het-c genotypes of numerous laboratory and wild strains of unknown constitution. In laboratory strains both loci are represented simply by two alleles. Analysis of het-c is more complicated in some wild strains, where differences have been demonstrated at one or more additional het loci within the duplication used and multiple allelism is also possible.—The results show that the duplication method can be used to identify and map additional vegetative incompatibility loci, without the necessity of heterokaryon tests.  相似文献   

16.
Since genome size and the number of duplicate genes observed in genomes increase from haploid to diploid organisms, diploidy might provide more evolutionary probabilities through gene duplication. It is still unclear how diploidy promotes genomic evolution in detail. In this study, we explored the evolution of segmental gene duplication in haploid and diploid populations by analytical and simulation approaches. Results show that (1) under the double null recessive (DNR) selective model, given the same recombination rate, the evolutionary trajectories and consequences are very similar between the same-size gene-pool haploid vs. diploid populations; (2) recombination enlarges the probability of preservation of duplicate genes in either haploid or diploid large populations, and haplo-insufficiency reinforces this effect; and (3) the loss of duplicate genes at the ancestor locus is limited under recombination while under complete linkage the loss of duplicate genes is always random at the ancestor and newly duplicated loci. Therefore, we propose a model to explain the advantage of diploidy: diploidy might facilitate the increase of recombination rate, especially under sexual reproduction; more duplicate genes are preserved under more recombination by originalization (by which duplicate genes are preserved intact at a special quasi-mutation-selection balance under the DNR or haplo-insufficient selective model), so genome sizes and the number of duplicate genes in diploid organisms become larger. Additionally, it is suggested that small genomic rearrangements due to the random loss of duplicate genes might be limited under recombination.USUALLY genome size becomes larger from haploid to diploid organisms (Lynch and Conery 2003), and so does the number of duplicate genes observed in genomes (Zhang 2003). It is extensively hypothesized that diploidy might facilitate the preservation and accumulation of duplicate genes, but it is still unclear how diploidy supports the evolution of duplicate genes in detail. The superiority of diploidy is classically attributed to preventing expression of deleterious mutations (Crow and Kimura 1965), but it is also argued that the sheltering of deleterious mutations cannot adequately explain the advantages of diploidy (Perrot et al. 1991).Recombination is a common phenomenon in all three kingdoms of life, Bacteria, Eukarya, and Archaea. It has been reported that recombination influences the loss of duplicate genes (Zhang and Kishino 2004; Xue et al. 2010). In diploid organisms, if recombination between the ancestor locus and the newly duplicated locus is free, the rate of recombination is maximally 0.5, which is commonly observed especially when the two loci are located on different chromosomes. Although recombination should not be regarded as an exception in haploid organisms (Fraser et al. 2007), recombination events usually occur more frequently in diploid populations than they do in haploid populations. In other words, diploidy might facilitate the occurrence of recombination. The difference of recombination behaviors between haploid and diploid organisms is an obvious and important feature during genomic evolution.In our recent studies of genomic duplication, we proposed a new possible way of preserving and accumulating duplicate genes in genomes—originalization (Xue and Fu 2009a). As is well known, for a locus in an infinite diploid population, the frequencies of wild-type and degenerative alleles will move to an equilibrium under purifying selection and mutation, which is known as the mutation–selection balance. After genomic duplication, under two simple selective models, double null recessive (DNR, under which valid individuals require at least one active wild-type allele on the ancestor and newly duplicated loci) and haplo-insufficient (HI or partial dominant, under which valid individuals require at least two active wild-type alleles on both loci) models, a special equilibrium of allele frequencies at the ancestor and newly duplicated loci will be reached under recombination, in which the frequency of wild-type allele is kept high at both loci. Under the HI selective model this balance becomes so stable and flexible that the fixation of a degenerative allele at one of these two loci (or the balance being broken) becomes very difficult even in a modest population (Xue and Fu 2009a,b). However, if the two loci are tightly linked (recombination rate r = 0), this balance of allele frequencies does not appear. As r increases, the balance becomes more stable and the frequency of the wild-type allele at two loci becomes higher. High frequency of the wild-type allele at both loci means that duplicate genes are preserved intact in genomes, so this phenomenon was named originalization.Although many duplicate genes originated from genomic duplications in some species, such as yeast, maize, and fish (Li et al. 2005), those from segmental duplications are also very popular (Zhang et al. 2000; Leister 2004). In haploid populations, most duplication events are small segmental duplications. Therefore, to understand genomic evolution comprehensively, it is necessary to explore the evolution of segmental genomic duplication.Lynch et al. (2001) and Tanaka et al. (2009) have studied the evolution of segmental gene duplication in diploid populations theoretically. However, in this study, we further compared the evolution of segmental gene duplication in haploid vs. diploid populations by numerical and simulation approaches under the DNR and HI selective models. We observed that haploid and diploid populations with the same-size gene pool are very similar under the DNR model and the same recombination rate. Recombination enlarges the probability of preservation of duplicate genes in either haploid or diploid populations via originalization, and haplo-insufficiency reinforces this effect. The loss of duplicate genes at the ancestor locus might be limited under recombination, while under complete linkage, the loss of duplicate genes is random at the ancestor and newly duplicated loci. According to these results, we propose a model with which to explain the revolutionary genomic transition from haploidy to diploidy.  相似文献   

17.
A small fraction (about 0.5%) of the transformants for a particular marker of B. subtilis (ilvA4; most probably a deletion) were found to be relatively unstable merodiploids. They possess a redundancy of the metB–ilvA chromosome segment. When their DNA is used as donor in transformation a merodiploid condition for the whole of this segment is created in all ilvA4+ transformants. For several of the duplicated loci both copies often are of recipient strain origin. Markers originally belonging to different copies of the diploidized region can be contransferred in PBS1-mediated transduction. The data are well in agreement with the hypothesis that the merodiploids carry a tandem duplication. An alternative hypothesis which does not call for integration of the exogenote within the recipient chromosome was also considered. Models are proposed for interpreting the segregation of the merodiploids, the transmission of the diploid state and its generation during transformation of the ilvA4 marker by wild-type DNA.  相似文献   

18.
Interchromosomal duplications are especially important for the study of X-linked genes. Males inheriting a mutation in a vital X-linked gene cannot survive unless there is a wild-type copy of the gene duplicated elsewhere in the genome. Rescuing the lethality of an X-linked mutation with a duplication allows the mutation to be used experimentally in complementation tests and other genetic crosses and it maps the mutated gene to a defined chromosomal region. Duplications can also be used to screen for dosage-dependent enhancers and suppressors of mutant phenotypes as a way to identify genes involved in the same biological process. We describe an ongoing project in Drosophila melanogaster to generate comprehensive coverage and extensive breakpoint subdivision of the X chromosome with megabase-scale X segments borne on Y chromosomes. The in vivo method involves the creation of X inversions on attached-XY chromosomes by FLP-FRT site-specific recombination technology followed by irradiation to induce large internal X deletions. The resulting chromosomes consist of the X tip, a medial X segment placed near the tip by an inversion, and a full Y. A nested set of medial duplicated segments is derived from each inversion precursor. We have constructed a set of inversions on attached-XY chromosomes that enable us to isolate nested duplicated segments from all X regions. To date, our screens have provided a minimum of 78% X coverage with duplication breakpoints spaced a median of nine genes apart. These duplication chromosomes will be valuable resources for rescuing and mapping X-linked mutations and identifying dosage-dependent modifiers of mutant phenotypes.MANY eukaryotes of biomedical and agricultural importance—including humans, other mammals, birds, and Drosophila—are heterogametic. Their sex chromosomes differ drastically in size and genetic composition. In species with X and Y chromosomes, males carry only one copy of each X-linked gene. This poses a serious challenge for experimental geneticists, because males inheriting a mutation in a vital X-linked gene die before they can be used in genetic crosses. In fact, the hemizygosity of X-linked genes in males has been a significant barrier to the functional analysis of many X-linked genes and is largely responsible for the poor genetic characterization of X chromosomes relative to autosomes in most organisms.The lethality of X-linked mutations can be rescued by providing a wild-type copy of the mutated gene elsewhere in the genome. This can be accomplished with a transgenic construct if the molecular identity of the mutated gene is known. In many cases, however, the mutated gene has not been identified and it is necessary to provide wild-type function with a multigene interchromosomal duplication, i.e., a segment of the X inserted in another chromosome. If the proximal and distal extents of the duplicated segment are known, phenotypic rescue maps the mutated gene to the defined X chromosome region.Multigene deletions can also be used to map X-linked mutations by complementation, but crosses between individuals carrying deletions and X-linked lethal mutations are impossible without rescuing the lethality of either the deletion or the lethal mutation in males. Projects at the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center and elsewhere (Parks et al. 2004; Ryder et al. 2007) have generated large collections of deletions with molecularly defined breakpoints in Drosophila melanogaster, but the utility of the X deletions is limited without duplications of the corresponding chromosomal regions.Duplications are potentially important for gene discovery. Identifying sets of genes involved in the same cellular process is a major focus of functional genomics research and this can be accomplished genetically by identifying dosage-sensitive modifiers of mutant phenotypes. Often, increasing or decreasing the copy number of a gene will enhance or suppress the phenotype associated with mutating another gene involved in the same process. Screening collections of deletions is a popular way to identify interacting genes in Drosophila (for examples, see Seher et al. 2007; Zhao et al. 2008; Aerts et al. 2009; Salzer et al. 2010) and was a major impetus for the assembly of the Bloomington Stock Center “Deficiency Kit,” which provides maximal coverage of the genome with the fewest deletions. Though dosage-sensitive modifiers could also be identified using increased gene dosage, the use of duplications in enhancer and suppressor screens remains largely unexplored. Assembling sets of duplications providing efficient genomic coverage would likely popularize this experimental approach.The size of duplicated segments determines how duplication chromosomes are used experimentally. Small duplicated segments allow high resolution gene mapping, but they are not suitable for other purposes. Only large duplicated segments are capable of rescuing the lethality of sizable multigene X deletions. Likewise, large duplicated segments provide efficiency in initially localizing mutations and identifying dosage-dependent modifiers. Despite their usefulness, interchromosomal duplications of large segments are among the hardest chromosomal rearrangements to isolate. In Drosophila, many existing duplications were recovered fortuitously as three-breakpoint aberrations following irradiation, but such rearrangements are rare and difficult to identify in screens. Other duplications were methodically constructed from preexisting rearranged chromosomes. This approach works well when it is possible, but it can be used only when progenitor aberrations with appropriate breakpoints are available. Because of these difficulties, the selection of duplication strains generated by Drosophila workers over the past several decades is not satisfactory for many purposes. The duplications are often difficult to use experimentally, their breakpoints are sparsely distributed along the X chromosome and only roughly mapped, and substantial gaps in coverage exist. Obviously, improved duplication resources are needed.Here we present the methodology and progress of a project at the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center to construct interchromosomal duplications of large, megabase-scale X segments. Our approach builds on the long history of manipulating Drosophila chromosomes in vivo (Novitski and Childress 1976; Ashburner et al. 2005), but we have eliminated the need for preexisting aberrations by generating progenitor chromosomes using the FLP-FRT system. Indeed, this site-specific recombination system has had an enormous impact on the ability of fly geneticists to engineer many kinds of novel chromosomes (Golic and Golic 1996; Parks et al. 2004; Ryder et al. 2007). We will demonstrate how we have combined FLP-mediated recombination and other chromosome manipulation techniques to produce Y-linked duplications of large X segments. As we will show, appending X segments to Y chromosomes rather than autosomes has advantages both for the synthesis and experimental use of X duplications.To date, we have generated a minimum of 78% X coverage with duplication breakpoints spaced a median of nine genes apart. We anticipate completion of the project within the coming year. Using these duplications, mutations and genetic modifiers can be mapped first to large X intervals using a tiling set of the largest duplicated segments and then to small chromosome intervals using subsets of the duplications. These duplications will also facilitate deletion mapping. The creation of a set of stocks providing complete duplication coverage and extensive breakpoint subdivision of the X chromosome in a consistent genetic background will remove an impediment to investigating the functions of X-linked genes that has frustrated generations of Drosophila geneticists.  相似文献   

19.
We have asked whether the mechanism by which tandem genetic duplications arise in the chromosome of phage lambda is inter- or intramolecular. Two parental phages carrying genetic markers at opposite ends of the phage chromosome have been grown in mixed infection, and progeny phages carrying newly-arising tandem duplications have been analysed to determine whether they carry the markers in parental or recombinant configuration. Ordinary genetic recombination of the markers has been prevented by mutations in the phage and host. Phages carrying tandem duplications are isolated by use of CsCl density gradients and an Escherichia coli strain that does not plate deletion phages. Of the duplication mutants isolated under these conditions, 13% carry the input markers in recombinant configuration. This suggests that tandem duplications can be produced via an intermolecular route which joins sequences originally present on different DNA molecules.  相似文献   

20.
Partial duplication of genetic material is prevalent in eukaryotes and provides potential for evolution of new traits. Prokaryotes, which are generally haploid in nature, can evolve new genes by partial chromosome duplication, known as merodiploidy. Little is known about merodiploid formation during genetic exchange processes, although merodiploids have been serendipitously observed in early studies of bacterial transformation. Natural bacterial transformation involves internalization of exogenous donor DNA and its subsequent integration into the recipient genome by homology. It contributes to the remarkable plasticity of the human pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae through intra and interspecies genetic exchange. We report that lethal cassette transformation produced merodiploids possessing both intact and cassette-inactivated copies of the essential target gene, bordered by repeats (R) corresponding to incomplete copies of IS861. We show that merodiploidy is transiently stimulated by transformation, and only requires uptake of a ∼3-kb DNA fragment partly repeated in the chromosome. We propose and validate a model for merodiploid formation, providing evidence that tandem-duplication (TD) formation involves unequal crossing-over resulting from alternative pairing and interchromatid integration of R. This unequal crossing-over produces a chromosome dimer, resolution of which generates a chromosome with the TD and an abortive chromosome lacking the duplicated region. We document occurrence of TDs ranging from ∼100 to ∼900 kb in size at various chromosomal locations, including by self-transformation (transformation with recipient chromosomal DNA). We show that self-transformation produces a population containing many different merodiploid cells. Merodiploidy provides opportunities for evolution of new genetic traits via alteration of duplicated genes, unrestricted by functional selective pressure. Transient stimulation of a varied population of merodiploids by transformation, which can be triggered by stresses such as antibiotic treatment in S. pneumoniae, reinforces the plasticity potential of this bacterium and transformable species generally.  相似文献   

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