Abstract: | The Mutator transposable element system is exceptional in many of its basic attributes. The high frequency and low specificity of mutant induction are both unusual and useful characteristics of the Mutator system. Other basic features are at least equally fascinating: the existence of multiple Mu element subfamilies with apparently unrelated internal sequences; the lack of correlation between Mu element transposition and excision; the complex inheritance of Mutator activity; the tight developmental regulation of Afufaror‐conditioned events; and the coordinated processes of element modification/inactivation, to name a few. Molecular and genetic studies over the last 10 years have begun to explain many of these interesting properties and have uncovered new mysteries of Mutator biology. Both positive and negative regulators of the system have been identified and characterized to varying degrees. Insertion specificity has been observed at several levels. Recent accomplishments include the isolation of an autonomous Mu element and the discovery of maize lines with altered developmental regulation of Mutator‐derived mutability. This review defines the Mutator system, describes the status of current experimentation in the Mutator field, proposes models that may explain some aspects of Mutator behavior, and details future studies that will help elucidate the nature of the Mutator phenomenon. |