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Studies of fs(1)1621, a mutation producing ovarian tumors in Drosophila melanogaster
Authors:Susanne M Gollin  Robert C King
Abstract:The ethyl methane sulfonate-induced mutation, fs(1)1621, resides at 11.7 on the genetic map and within segment 4F1-5A1 of the cytological map of the X chromosome. When homozygous, fs(1)1621 renders females semisterile but has no effect on their viability; nor does it affect the viability or fertility of hemizygous males. Heterozygous females are fertile and have cytologically normal ovaries. The ovaries of homozygous females first produce normal oocytes, which, if fertilized, can develop into adult males or females. After this period, ovarian chambers containing only pseudonurse cells are formed, and finally mutant germaria produce only tumors. These contain hundreds to thousands of cells that appear to be derived from germarial cystocytes, because they occasionally form clones of interconnected cells and also can differentiate into endopolyploid pseudonurse cells. Raising the temperature speeds the rate at which tumors form; lowering it increases the probability of pseudonurse cell differentiation. Df(1)C159 includes fs(1)1621. The pattern of ovarian chamber production is more temperature sensitive in hemizygous females than in homozygous ones. The morphology of hemizygous tumors and the number of dividing cells within them also differ from homozygotes. These observations support the hypothesis that fs(1)1621 is producing a product, that less is produced by one gene than by two, and that the product plays a role in the mitosis and cytokinesis of ovarian cystocytes.
Keywords:cytokinesis  fusome  intercellular bridges  oogenesis  sterility  tumor mutations
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