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1.
The mutation Polycomb (Pc) is known to cause a variety of intersegmental transformations in homozygous and heterozygous individuals of Drosophila melanogaster; Pc+ is thought to act as a negative regulator of genes of the bithorax complex. The function of this gene in the maternal germ line has been assessed by examining the variation in expression of these homoeotic phenotypes in individuals derived from a maternal germ line with a single or no dose of the Pc+ allele. Mosaic individuals with a homozygous or heterozygous Pc germ line were produced by transplantation of pole cells, the embryonic precursors of the germ line. By employing an X-linked dominant female-sterile mutation, the identification of mosaic females and the study of progeny derived from the exogenous germ line were greatly simplified; the advantages of this system for the transplantation of pole cells for such analyses are described. In general, all thoracic and abdominal segments of homozygous Pc embryos differentiate characteristics of the eighth, most posterior, abdominal segment. The extent and uniformity of this transformation as well as other manifestations of the homozygous Pc genotype are described and shown to be correlated with the maternal germ line genotype; homozygous Pc embryos derived from a homozygous Pc maternal germ line show greater expression of these phenotypes than do genetically identical embryos derived from a heterozygous Pc maternal germ line. The expression of some homoeotic phenotypes typical of heterozygous Pc adults shows only a slight correlation with the maternal genotype, while no homoeotic transformations are clearly evident in heterozygous larvae of either origin. Thus, the maternal effect of Pc is rescuable. The results suggest that the Pc+ gene is active in the maternal germ line but that the absence of the maternally derived Pc+ product can be largely compensated by the introduction of a wild-type allele upon fertilization; this rescue indicates that the maternal activity of Pc+ plays no major role in the normal process of embryonic segmental determination. The normal fertility of males and females with a homozygous Pc germ line and of their progeny suggests that Pc+ plays no role in the determination or development of the germ line in either the maternal or zygotic genome.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Sato T  Russell MA  Denell RE 《Genetics》1983,105(2):357-370
A new recessive lethal mutation in Drosophila melanogaster , Enhancer of Polycomb [E(Pc)], and chromosomal deficiencies lacking this locus act as dominant enhancers of the Polycomb mutant syndrome in adults. Thus, although E(Pc)/+ flies are phenotypically normal, this locus is haplo-abnormal with respect to its effect on the Polycomb phenotype. Recombinational and deficiency mapping localize the E(Pc) locus on chromosome 2 proximally and very closely linked (~0.1 map unit) to the engrailed gene. E(Pc) enhances the expression of all Polycomb point mutations examined including that of a deficiency, indicating that this interaction does not depend on the presence of an altered Polycomb gene product. In several respects the mutations extra sex comb, lethal(4)29, and Polycomblike resemble those at the Polycomb locus. In the presence of E(Pc), recessive alleles of extra sex comb and lethal(4)29 are rendered slightly pseudodominant, and the homoeotic effects of Polycomblike heterozygotes are also enhanced. However, E(Pc) does not affect the expression of dominant mutations within the Bithorax gene complex (Cbx) or Antennapedia gene complex (AntpNs, Antp73b, Antpscx , AntpEfW15, ScrMsc) which give homoeotic transformations resembling those of the Polycomb syndrome. Available evidence from the study of adult phenotypes suggests that mutations at E(Pc) do not result in homoeotic changes directly but instead modify the expression of a specific set of functionally related homoeotic variants.  相似文献   

4.
Summary A new homoeotic mutant, I127, showing abnormal growths in the head region including homoeotic transformation of eye to genitalia and antenna to leg, was isolated in a screen designed to find new alleles of the tumorous head (tuh-3), mutation. Similarities in the phenotype and genetics of the mutant, and complementation studies with tuh-1; tuh-3, suggest that I127 is indeed an allele of tuh-3. In combination with the first chromosome modifier tuh-1, the mutant is temperature-sensitive during the third larval instar, giving an increased penetrance of the tumorous head phenotype when reared at 25° C as opposed to 18° C. The isolation of further alleles at the tumorous-head locus are essential. The types of morphological defects which can result from mutations at this locus would enable us to establish if this is a complex locus, and if null mutations are lethal during development. The interactions of the tumorous-head gene with first chromosome modifiers and other homoeotic mutations will only be understood if we able to induce a number of mutations at this locus, and as a consequence begin to elucidate the role of the wild-type gene product in normal development.  相似文献   

5.
Summary We describe a set of cells in the central nervous system of theDrosophila embryo which are restricted to the thoracic ganglia in the wildtype. Taking these cells as indication of thoracic identity, we find that the ventral cord of embryos homozygous mutant for different bithorax functions and for Polycomb undergoes homoeotic transformations equivalent to those observed in the larval cuticle.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The complex genetic locuspolyhomeotic (ph) is a member of thePolycomb (Pc)-group of genes and as such is required for the normal expression of ANT-C and BX-C genes. It also has probably other functions since amorphicph alleles display a cell death phenotype in the ventral epidermis of 12-h-old embryos. Here it is shown that lethal alleles ofph (amorph and strong hypomorph) show transformation of most of their segments towards AB8. Theph + product is required autonomously in imaginal cells. The total lack ofph + function prevents viability of the cuticular derivatives of these cells.ph has a strong maternal effect on segmental identity and epidermal development that can not be rescued by one paternally supplied dose ofph + in the zygote. These phenotypes differ substantially from those of previously describedPc-group genes. AmongPc-group genes,ph seems to be the only one that is strongly required both maternally and zygotically for normal embryonic development.  相似文献   

7.
Homoeosis in Drosophila. II. a Genetic Analysis of Polycomb   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0  
Denell RE 《Genetics》1978,90(2):277-289
Three dominant mutant alleles of the Polycomb locus of Drosophila melanogaster are associated with homoeotic transformations of meso- and metathoracic to prothoracic legs, a homoeotic transformation of antennae to legs, and abnormalities of wings and some thoracic bristles. Puro and Nygrén (1975) localized Polycomb in the proximal left arm of chromosome 3 within salivary gland chromosome interval 77E,F-80. In the present study, the location and dosage relationships of this locus were examined, using translocation-generated segmental aneuploidy. The results indicate that Polycomb lies within interval 78C,D-79D, and that the locus is haplo-insufficient. Males hypoploid for this interval show meso- and metathoracic leg transformations, and both males and females show wing abnormalities. In addition, the legs of hypoploids of both sexes are shorter than those of wild-type flies, and show aberrancies of segmentation, chaetal number and distribution, and other morphological characteristics. Hypoploid flies do not express a homoeotic antennal-leg transformation, but the deficiency is associated with a Minute phenotype that is known to suppress this transformation in Polycomb flies; thus it cannot be ascertained whether the antennal-leg transformation is a haplo-insufficient phenotype. It is suggested that the expression of non-homoeotic pleiotropic effects provides a criterion for identifying homoeotic mutations that do not function directly in the establishment of determined states, but rather cause homoeosis indirectly. Polycomb is interpreted in this fashion, and it is suggested that the mutant syndrome may result from localized cell death.  相似文献   

8.
Summary We have studied the embryonic and adult phenotypes of genetic combinations between Polycomb (Pc), Regulator of bithorax (Rg-bx) and the genes of the Bithorax complex (BX-C) and the Antennapedia complex (ANT-C). The products of Pc and Rg-bx genes act antagonistically, their mutant combinations leading to the ectopic expression of genes of the BX-C and ANT-C. The genetic analysis of the Pc locus suggests it is a complex gene. Pc+ products behave as members of a regulatory set that negatively control the expression of BX-C and ANT-C genes. Genetic combinations between different doses of Pc, Rg-bx and the genes of the BX-C and ANT-C have phenotypes which may be interpreted as resulting from ectopic derepression of posterior selector genes repressing selector genes of anterior segments. The transformation phenotypes of certain genetic combinations differ in embryos and adults. A model of regulation of the BX-C and the ANT-C genes during the imaginal cell proliferation is presented, in which the specification state is maintained by self-activation of a given selector gene and down modulation of other selector genes in the same cell.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Members of thePolycomb (Pc) group of genes are required for the correct determination of segment identity, and are thought to be negative regulators of thebithorax andAntennapedia complexes. This hypothesis has been tested molecularly for only some members of thePc group. Here, we examine the distribution ofUltrabithorax (Ubx),Antennapedia (Antp), andSex combs reduced (Scr) proteins in the epidermis, central nervous system, and midgut of embryos homozygous for mutations in tenPc group genes. We show that zygotic loss of mostPc group genes causes ectopic expression ofUbx andAntp, but that there are differences in time and tissue-specificity. FivePc group mutations lack midgut constrictions and also exhibit ectopic or suppressedUbx expression and suppression ofAntp expression. Distribution ofAntp is upset earlier than distribution ofUbx in the central nervous system of everyPc group mutant affecting both genes. Loss of the zygotic products ofPolycomb, extra sex combs, andAdditional sex combs cause ectopic expression ofScr in epidermis, and allPc group genes exceptPsc have suppressedScr expression in the nervous system. These results are discussed with respect to the function of thePc group.  相似文献   

10.
The maternal effect and zygotic phenotype of l(1)pole hole (l(1)ph) is described. l(1)ph is a zygotic lethal mutation which affects cell division of adult precursor cells in Drosophila larvae. The locus is located in 2F6 on the salivary gland chromosome map and four alleles have been characterized. Germ-line clonal analysis of amorphic alleles indicates that l(1)ph has a maternal effect lethal phenotype. Two lethal phenotypes are observed among embryos derived from female germ-line clones homozygous for amorphic alleles dependent upon the zygotic activity of l(1)ph+ introduced via the sperm. Class 1: If no wild-type dose of the gene is introduced, embryos form abnormal blastoderms in which nuclear migration and cell formation is disrupted leading to an ill-defined cuticular pattern. Class 2: If a wild-type copy of the gene is introduced, blastoderm cells do not form beneath the pole cells (the pole hole phenotype); subsequently such embryos are missing cuticular structures posterior to the seventh abdominal segment (the torso phenotype). When the zygotic activity l(1)ph+ is modulated using position effect variegation a new phenotype is observed among class 2 embryos in which torso embryos are twisted along their longitudinal axis.  相似文献   

11.
R. E. Denell 《Genetics》1973,75(2):279-297
A number of homoeotic mutants have been localized to the proximal right arm of chromosome 3 of Drosophila melanogaster. These include seven alleles of Antennapedia (Antp), which is associated with a transformation of antennae into legs; Nasobemia (Ns), which causes the same phenotype as Antp but was considered by Gehring (1966) not to be an allele; and three genes causing a transformation of second and third legs into first legs: Extra sex comb (Scx), Polycomb (Pc), and Multiple sex comb (Msc.). The alleles of Antp and Scx share a common recessive lethal effect, and Pc maps 0.2-0.3 units to the left of Scx.-In the present investigation, rearrangements associated with the reversion of Ns suggest that its cytological location is in or just distal to salivary chromosome doublet 84B1-2. Although Ns is viable when homozygous, four of its revertants share a common recessive lethal effect. These revertants fail to complement the recessive lethality of Antp(B) and Scx. Furthermore, they show a complex pattern of functional interaction with Pc and with Humeral (Hu), a dominant mutation associated with a rearrangement with one breakpoint just distal to 84B1-2. Finally, analysis of a revertant of Msc indicates that Msc is also located very close to 84B1-2. It is concluded that Ns and Scx are alleles of Antp. Pc shows many functional similarities to the Antp locus, but is probably not allelic. Evidence is presented that these dominant homoeotic genes are neomorphic in nature.  相似文献   

12.
The manifestation of 5 alleles of aristapedia and 2 alleles of Polycomb was studied in initial stocks and in flies of Pc ssa/+ssa genotype. Mutual enhancement of homoeotic effects of ssa and Pc genes was observed. Differences in intergenic interaction were aristapedia, rather than Polycomb specific. Possible role of homoeotic mutations as mutations of regulatory genes and the bearing of the data on their interaction on the results of clonal analysis of homoeosis are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
14.
《Developmental biology》1986,118(1):28-41
The maternal and zygotic effect phenotypes of mutations at the l(1)hopscotch (l(1)hop) locus are described. l(1)hop is located in 10B6-8 on the salivary gland chromosome map and 17 alleles have been characterized. A complex complementation pattern is observed among the 17 alleles. The lethal phase of null alleles of l(1)hop occurs at the larval-pupal interface associated with a small disc phenotype. Embryos produced from homozygous l(1)hop germline clones show segment specific defects. The extent of these defects depends upon both the strength of the allele and the paternal contribution. In the most extreme case embryos exhibit defects associated with five segments T2, T3, A4, A5, and A8. In the less extreme phenotype defects are only associated with A5. Thus, activity of l(1)hop+ is required both for the maintenance and continued cell division of diploid imaginal precursors and for the establishment of the full array of segments.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Pole cell transplantations were used to construct germ line mosaics of the Drosophila melanogaster maternal effect mutant mat(3)1. The mutant is of particular interest since the development of embryos derived from homozygous mat(3)1 females is arrested at the pole cell stage. Such embryos form exclusively pole cells and no blastoderm cells. By means of germ line mosaics we could demonstrate the primary target tissue of mutant gene expression. For normal development the mat(3)1 +gene has to be expressed in the germ line. Pole cells formed in defective embryos derived from homozygous mutant mothers were transplanted into normal recipient embryos to test their developmental potential. Heterozygous mat(3)1 pole cells were found to form fertile gametes in both sexes whereas homozygous mat(3)1 pole cells form fertile gametes only in males. The lack of progeny derived from homozygous mat(3)1 donor pole cells in recipient females further demonstrates the germ line autonomy of the mat(3)1 mutation. Pole cells from defective embryos that are transplanted into normal hosts colonize the gonads with the same frequency as donor pole cells derived from normal embryos. This indicates that mat(3)1 derived pole cells are normal with respect to their function as germ cells and that the mat(3)1 mutant might therefore offer a convenient source for the mass isolation of functional pole cells.  相似文献   

16.
Trudi Schüpbach 《Genetics》1985,109(3):529-548
In somatic cells of Drosophila, the ratio of X chromosomes to autosomes (X:A ratio) determines sex and dosage compensation. The present paper addresses the question of whether germ cells also use the X:A ratio for sex determination and dosage compensation. Triploid female embryos were generated which, through the loss of an unstable ring-X chromosome, contained some germ cells of 2X;3A constitution in their ovaries. Such germ cells were shown to differentiate along one of two alternative pathways: a minority developed into normal female oocytes and eggs; the majority developed into abnormal multicellular cysts. An X:A ratio of 1 is, therefore, required in female germ cell development, at least in the mature ovary after stem cell division. Abnormal development of female germ cells was also observed when 2X;2A germ cells which were homozygous or trans-heterozygous for mutant alleles at the Sex-lethal locus were transplanted into normal female host embryos at the blastoderm stage. Germ cells homozygous for amorphic alleles failed to give rise to normal eggs. Instead, they formed multicellular cysts, very similar to those formed by 2X;3A cells. Zygotic Sxl+ activity is, therefore, also necessary for the development of normal female germ cells. No abnormalities were detected in transplanted germ cells from female embryos whose mothers had been homozygous for the mutation daughterless. When normal XY germ cells were transplanted into female embryos, no traces of such cells could be found in the adult ovary. XY germ cells seem, therefore, not to develop as far as 2X;3A or Sxl homozygous cells in a female gonad. This indicates that neither 2X;3A nor Sxl homozygous germ cells are equivalent to normal XY germ cells.  相似文献   

17.
A null mutation at the phosphoglucomutase locus (Pgm-1) was discovered by electrophoretic analysis of the inbred mouse strain C57 BL/6J. The null allele (Pgm-1 n) was shown to segregate as a Mendelian unit alternative to the Pgm-1 a and Pgm-1 b alleles. Mice expressing the Pgm-1 n allele, either in the heterozygous or homozygous state, are viable, healthy, and fertile. The occurrence of the Pgm-1 n mutant revealed a previously unreported genetic locus (Pgm-3) that controls the expression of a third phosphoglucomutase. Two electrophoretically expressed alleles of Pgm-3 (inherited without dominance) are found in the inbred mouse strains C57 BL/6J and DBA/2J. Linkage observed between the Pgm-3 locus, the dilute locus (d) and the cytoplasmic malic enzyme locus (Mod-1) has allowed assignment of the Pgm-3 locus to chromosome 9. A striking tissue specific expression of Pgm-1 and Pgm-3 was observed. Products of the Pgm-3 locus were detected in kidney, testes, brain, and heart. In contrast, Pgm-1 controlled isozymes were present in kidney, spleen, ovaries, and erythrocytes.Financial support for this work was provided in part by Contract #263-78-C-0393 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences to the Research Triangle Institute.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Only a small fraction of the known mutations causing death to homozygous Drosophila produce gross morphological defects during embryogenesis. We have examined fourteen such loci on the X-chromosome to determine: 1) whether the requirement for their respective activities is restricted to embryogenesis; and 2) whether the embryonic phenotype in mutant embryos is affected by the dosage of wild-type alleles in the mother. For two alleles per locus germ line clones were produced during larval development by irradiating females heterozygous for the lethal mutation and a dominant female sterile (ovoD). Only one of the 14 loci (armadillo) is required during development of the germ cell to make morphologically normal eggs. Mutations at two other loci, (bazooka and Notch), allow normal oogenesis but cause major reductions in the viability of genetically normal (i.e., heterozygous) progeny. The majority of the loci (11/14) are not required in the germ line for either oogenesis or embryogenesis. However, in three cases (extradenticle, faintoid and lethal myospheroid), germ line homozygosity results in a readily detectible enhancement of embryonic phenotype over that observed in embryos derived from heterozygous mothers still possessing one wild type allele. The same six loci which show the most substantial effects on germ line homozygosity (arm, baz, N, exd, ftd and mys) also show an amelioration of the mutant phenotypes when maternal dosage is increased to wild type levels by using attached-X females. Four of these same loci (arm, baz, N and exd were cell lethal in imaginal discs.  相似文献   

19.
The observed patterns of segregation of two co-dominant alleles at the macaque albumin locus in 400 rhesus monkey offspring were compared with those expected for five segregating mating phenotypes. Rates of reproductive loss and conception were also compared among females of each albumin phenotype. The common albumin allele in macaques, AlAmac, segregated more frequently than expected when the mother was heterozygous but less frequently than expected when she was homozygous for AlBmac. In both cases, the phenotype identical to that of the mother appeared to be favored. Mothers who were either homozygous for AlAmac or heterozygous were also found to experience higher conception rates than mothers homozygous for AlBmac. It is hypothesized that phenotypic differences in bilirubin binding, and in competitive binding by dietary constituents, by albumin influences both these results and the nonrandom distribution of AlBmac in Asian macaques.  相似文献   

20.
The locus hunchback (hb) is a member of the gap class of segmentation genes of Drosophila. A number of X-ray-induced deletions locate the hb locus at the chromosomal site 85A3-B1, to the right of the pink locus, which maps in the same interval. A total of 14 EMS and 3 X-ray-induced hb alleles have been studied. Homozygous mutant embryos show deletions of segments in two separate regions. In the six strong alleles, the labium and all three thoracic segments are deleted anteriorly while posteriorly the 8th abdominal segment and adjacent parts of the 7th abdominal segment are lacking. The eight weak alleles show smaller deletions both in the thoracic and posterior abdominal region. In the weakest allele only part of the mesothorax is deleted. Three hb alleles produce a homoeotic transformation: superimposed on a strong or weak deletion phenotype, head or thoracic segments are transformed into abdominal segments, respectively. This suggests that hb might also be involved in the regulation of genes in the Bithorax complex (BX-C). Fate mapping of the normal-appearing segments in strong mutant embryos using the UV-laser beam ablation technique (Lohs-Schardin et al., 1979) shows that these segments arise from the normal blastoderm regions. The mutant phenotype can be recognized soon after the onset of gastrulation in a failure to fully extend the germ band. In 6-hr-old mutant embryos, two clusters of dead cells are observed in the thoracic and posterior abdominal region. These observations indicate region specific requirement of hb gene function. The analysis of germ line chimeras by transplantation of homozygous mutant pole cells shows that hb is already expressed during oogenesis. Homozygous mutant embryos derived from a homozygous mutant germ line have a novel phenotype. The anterior affected region is enlarged, including all three gnathal segments and the anterior three abdominal segments. In addition three abdominal segments with reversed polarity are formed between the remaining head structures and the posterior abdomen. Heterozygous mutant embryos derived from a homozygous mutant germ line develop normally, indicating that maternal gene expression is not required for normal development.  相似文献   

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