scholarly journals GENE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THIRD-CHROMOSOME INVERSIONS OF DROSOPHILA PSEUDOOBSCURA

Genetics ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 84 (4) ◽  
pp. 787-790
Author(s):  
Satya Prakash

ABSTRACT Associations of alleles of the acid phosphatase-3 locus with the different third-chromosome inversions from different populations of D. pseudoobscura are described. We observe only the allele AP-31.0 in the Standard and Arrow-head inversions and the allele AP-3.98 in the Santa Cruz, Treeline, Cuernavaca and the Pikes Peak arrangements. The Chiricahua gene arrangement is polymorphic.

Genetics ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 727-741
Author(s):  
R A Norman ◽  
Satya Prakash

ABSTRACT Efforts were made to discriminate new genetic variants among electrophoretic alleles that are associated with chromosome 3 inversions of Drosophila pseudoobscura and D. persimilis. Apparent genetic similarities for electrophoretic alleles between these two species and among the common inversions they carry were reexamined by altering gel concentration and buffer pH. At the amylase locus, the 1.09 electrophoretic allele could be further separated into two allelic classes that differentiated the WT and KL arrangements. Similarly, the 0.84 electrophoretic allele was divided into two allelic classes, one characteristic of the Santa Cruz phylad arrangements, TL and SC, and the other found in strains of the Standard phylad arrangements and CH. Uncommon amylase alleles proved to be different alleles in the two species. No new allelic variants, however, could be found among strains with the amylase 1.00 allele, the commonest allele in the Standard phylad of both species. No major new allelic variation was detected for acid phosphatase-3 and larval protein-10 that revealed any further differentiation among species or inversions. Variation at all three loci in strains of the Bogota population remained genetically similar to variation in strains of mainland D. pseudoobscura.


Genetika ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 343-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Víctor Salceda ◽  
Judith Guzmán ◽  
Olga Olvera

Samples of D. pseudoobscura were taken in seventeen localities in Central Mexico inside the parallels 18o - 20o N, with the purpose of determine the chromosomal polymorphism in the third of the different populations of this species. From each captured female a single larva of its offspring was taken, its salivary glands extracted and stained with a solution of aceto orcein to observe the polytene chromosomes. From these smears the corresponding karyotype of each larva was determined, keeping a record of them. With the information gathered the relative frequency of each one of the fourteen different inversions found was calculated. A grand total of 1894 third chromosomes were analyzed. The fourteen different inversions found are equivalent to a 34.1 % of the total chromosomal variation of the species. The most abundant inversions found were: TL 50.6 %, CU 27.2 5, SC 9.1 % and EP 5.5 %; the remaining ten inversions detected are in general grounds rare ones with variable relative frequencies depending on the locality. Analysis of the predominant inversions for each population was done. The presence of West-East gradients is reported, even if in cases not so well defined, since as one moves in a particular direction the ups and downs in relative frequency for the alternating pairs TL-CU; TL-SC in the western populations and TL-CU in the eastern ones were observed. The assignment of each population to a particular race was also done, and such a way we were able to recognize three different races coexisting in the area of study.


1971 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Thomson

The effect of karyotype on body weight and resistance to desiccation has been examined for the Standard (ST) and Chiricahua (CH) gene arrangements of Drosophila pseudoobscura obtained from Mather, California. Mean body weights fall in the order ST/CH > CH/CH > ST/ST, and variability of body weight in the order CH/CH > ST/ST > ST/CH in adult flies of both sexes. The relative resistance to desiccation in mass survival tests at 0% relative humidity, without food, is [Formula: see text] in males and [Formula: see text] in females. Karyotype has an effect on survival under desiccation, apart from its effect on body size.The data provide a further example of pronounced heterosis associated with a gene-arrangement polymorphism under extreme environmental conditions.


Genetics ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 95 (1) ◽  
pp. 187-209
Author(s):  
R A Norman ◽  
Satya Prakash

ABSTRACT Different electrophoretic alleles of amylase show associations with particular chromosome 3 inversions in D. pseudoobscura and D. persimilis. Relative adult amylase activities were compared in 37, 37and 10 strains of D. pseudoobscura, D. persimilis and D. miranda, respectively. Strains carrying the same electrophoretic allele were compared by crossing these lines individually to a reference strain carrying a different electrophoretic mobility allele. This procedure allows comparisons among species, inversions, electromorphs and strains for genetic variation in amylase activity. F2analysis established that the activity variation co-segregates with the structural amylase locus. This type of variation could be due to either structural gene differences or differences in closely linked, cis-acting regulatory regions. Variation has been detected among and within electrophoretic mobility classes. Moreover, this variation is clearly nonrandom and reveals more of the genetic structure associated with the chromosomal inversion phylogeny of D. pseudoobscura and D. persimilis. —Some of the findings are: (1) Similar electromorphs in D. pseudoobscura and D. persimilis usually show different activities. These species show nearly complete differentiation of amylase alleles, based on activities. (2) D. persimilis has the broadest range of variation in amylase activity, about four-fold between the highest and lowest alleles. D. pseudoobscura and D. miranda are also polymorphic for activity, but have more constrained ranges of variation. D. miranda alleles show on the average about four times the activity of D. pseudoobscura alleles. (3) Some association of electrophoretic mobility and activity has been found. Alleles 1.09 of D. persimilis, as well as 1.43 and 1.55 of D. miranda, have relatively high activity. It may be that these high activity alleles are part of an adaptation to cooler habitats. (4)Within electrophoretic classes, associations of activities with inversions have been found. These are especially strong in D. persimilis. The 1.00 alleles in the ST, KL,MD and WT inversions, the 0.92 allele in the ST and MD inversions and the 1.09 allele in the WT and KLinversions have levels of activities that depend upon the arrangement in which they are located. These results demonstrate that suppression of recombination in inversion heterokaryotypes can result inextensive genic divergence between inversions.


Genetics ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. 371-379
Author(s):  
Satya Prakash ◽  
Max Levitan

ABSTRACT Evidence of strong associations of Est-1 alleles with the 2L, 2L1 and 2L3 gene arrangements of the left arm of the second chromosome in D. robusta is presented. Each gene arrangement is polymorphic for three to four Est-1 alleles. The allele frequencies differ in the 2L3 and 2L arrangements; the allele Est-1.92 is 8% in the 2L3 arrangement (n=203)—this allele is 82% in the 2L arrangement (n=203); the allele Est-11.0 is 66% and 14.8% in the 2L3 and 2L arrangements, respectively. There are no differences in allele frequencies in 2L3 arrangements from any of the widely separated seven different populations; similarly the allele frequencies in the 2L arrangement are alike in all five widely separated populations studied. The allele frequencies in the 2L1 arrangement are intermediate to those observed in the 2L3 and the 2L arrangements and show north-south clinal change. These associations between Est-1 alleles and gene arrangements of the left arm of the second chromosome are due to natural selection favoring different allele frequencies in different gene arrangements, as a result of epistatic interactions between the Est-1 locus and the loci on the gene arrangements. As expected, we observe that the proportion of heterozygotes is greater in the inversion heterokaryotypes than in the homokaryotypes.


Genetics ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 743-755
Author(s):  
R A Norman ◽  
Satya Prakash

ABSTRACT Allozymes of the Ap-3 locus in Drosophila pseudoobscura show very strong associations with chromosome 3 inversions. The 0.98 electrophoretic allele is associated with the TL, SC, CH and PP gene arrangements, while the 1.00 electrophoretic allele is characteristic of the AR and ST gene arrangements. Variation in relative 0.98 and 1.00 AP-3 allozyme activities of chromosome 3 isogenic strains was examined on acrylamide gels in F1 heterozygotes obtained by crossing these strains individually to a reference strain with a slower 0.87 mobility allozyme. F2 analyses demonstrated that the activity variants cosegregate with the Ap-3 locus. Both 0.98 and 1.00 allelic classes are polymorphic for AP-3 activities. In contrast to the virtual monomorphism for an electrophoretic allele, each inversion is polymorphic for AP-3 activities. These results reveal substantially more genetic differentiation among gene arrangements than is evident from electrophoretic allele comparisons. Strains having the PP arrangement are distinct from TL strains in their AP-3 activity expression, and ST strains have a wider range of variation than AR strains. In contrast, no geographical differentiation is evident for strains from the Bogota population of D. pseudoobscura.


1993 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Gebhardt ◽  
W. W. Anderson

SummaryWe measured temperature-dependent fertility selection on body size in Drosophila pseudoobscura in the laboratory. One hundred single females of each of the three karyotypes involving the ‘sexratio’ (SR) and the standard (ST) gene arrangement on the sex chromosome laid eggs at either 18 or 24°C. The experiment addressed the following hypotheses: (a) Fertility selection on body size is weaker at the higher temperature, explaining in part why genetically smaller flies appear to evolve in populations at warmer localities, (b) Homokaryotypic SR females are less fecund than homokaryotypic ST females, possibly mediated by the effect of body size on fertility, explaining the low frequencies of SR despite its strong advantage due to meiotic drive. The data were also expected to shed light on a mechanism for the evolution of plasticity of body size through fertility selection in environments with an unpredictable temperature regime. Hypothesis (a) was clearly refuted because phenotypically larger ST females had an even larger fertility surplus at the higher temperature and, more importantly, the genetic correlation between fertility and body size disappeared at the lower temperature. As to (b), we found that temperature affects fertility directly and indirectly through body size such that ST and SR females were about equally fecund at both temperatures, although different in size and size-adjusted fertility. We observed heterosis for both size and fertility, which might stabilize the polymorphism in nature. The reaction norms of body size to the temperature difference were steeper for ST females than for SR females, implying that fertility selection could change phenotypic plasticity of body size in a population. Selection on body size depended not only on the temperature, but also on the karyotypes, suggesting that models of phenotype evolution using purely phenotypic fitness functions may often be inadequate.


Genetics ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 513-520
Author(s):  
Satya Prakash

ABSTRACT Genetic variation at 43 loci has been studied in six different populations of Drosophila persimilis by electrophoresis of enzymes and proteins. In D. persimilis the mean proportion of polymorphic loci is 0.362, the mean proportion of heterozygous loci per individual is 0.100 and the average number of alleles per locus is 1.651. In all populations, the loci coding for the hydrolytic and other nonspecific enzymes are much more variable than the loci coding for the enzymes of the glycolytic pathway, Kreb's cycle, other specific enzymes and larval proteins. Most loci have similar allele frequency in all populations except the two loci, Amylase and Pt-12, which show a pattern of associations of different alleles with different third chromosome inversions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 125-131
Author(s):  
Víctor Salceda

Se determinaron las fluctuaciones temporales en cuatro poblaciones experimentales de Drosophila pseudoobscura; a partir de cromosomas politénicos se determinaron los genotipos y frecuencias relativas durante 4-6 muestreos mensuales Poblaciones de ésta especie muestran 2-3 inversiones principales con frecuencias conjuntas del 90% del total y de 4-7 secundarias que completan la muestra. Los cambios se presentan fundamentalmente en los componentes principales, provocando oscilaciones a través del tiempo. Se obtuvieron los cambios siguientes: población Tulancingo, la inversión TL (Tree Line) pasa de 54 a 70% y su contraparte CU (Cuernavaca) de 34 a 17%. Población Zirahuén, SC (Santa Cruz) de 34 a 36%, TL de 25 a 30% y CU de 23 a 5% y de los secundarios OA (Oaxaca) de 10 a 5% y EP (Estes Park) de 3 a 12%. Población Xochimilco CU de 51 a 16%, TL de 33 a 44%, EP de 8 a 10% con un máximo intermedio de 17% y OL (Olympic) de 1 a 18%. Población Nevado de Colima SC de 65 a 45% con oscilación máxima de 74%, TL de 20 a 29% y un mínimo de 16%, OL de 5 a 17%. En general en las cuatro poblaciones el resto de las inversiones secundarias fluctuaron en promedio dos por ciento.


Genetics ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. 347-369
Author(s):  
Satya Prakash

ABSTRACT The central and marginal populations of D. robusta differ greatly in the level of inversion polymorphism; the marginal populations are monomorphic or nearly so and the central populations are highly polymorphic. This paper presents the frequencies of alleles at forty gene loci in various populations of D. robusta, studied by electrophoresis of proteins and enzymes. Population samples were obtained from eight widely separated populations of D. robusta which included the central, the extreme marginal and the intervening populations between the center and the margins. We find that the proportion of polymorphic loci and average heterozygosity per individual is slightly higher in the marginal populations than the central populations. In D. robusta on an average, 39% of the loci are polymorphic and the average proportion of loci heterozygous per individual is 11%. A breakdown of loci in three categories, viz, hydrolytic enzymes and some other enzymes, larval proteins and glycolytic and Kreb's cycle enzymes, shows that in all populations the level of polymorphism is highest in the hydrolytic enzymes, intermediate in larval proteins and least in the glycolytic and Kreb's cycle enzymes. On the average, the proportion of loci heterozygous per individual for three groups of loci is: hydrolytic enzymes and others (.164), larval proteins (.115) and glycolytic and Kreb's cycle enzymes (.037). We also observe that in all populations the level of polymorphism on the X chromosome is far less than the expected 38%; in salivary gland cells the euchromatic length of the X chromosome is 38% of the entire genome. Lower levels of polymorphism for the X chromosome loci are explained due to low probability of balanced polymorphisms for the X-linked loci since the conditions for establishment of balanced polymorphism for X-linked loci are more restrictive than for the autosomal loci.—The polymorphic loci can be grouped according to pattern of allele frequencies in different populations as follows: (1) The allele frequencies are similar in all populations at the XDH, Pep-1 and Hex-1 loci. (2) The alleles at the Est-1, Est-2, Amy loci and the AP-41.0 and the LAP-1.90 alleles show north south clinal change in frequency. (3) There is north south and east west differentiation at the Pt-5, Pt-8 and Pt-9 loci and the allele AP-4.81. (4) Polymorphism at loci such as Fum, B.Ox, Hex-8, Pep-2 and Pep-3 are restricted to only one or two of the populations. (5) Allele frequencies at the MDH and ODH loci fluctuate between populations. (6) Allele frequencies at many polymorphic loci such as Est-1, Est-2, LAP-1, AP-4, Pt-5, Pt-8, Pt-9, Pt-16, MDH, Fum change clinally within a gene arrangement. The pattern of gene variation in D. robusta is very complex and cannot be easily explained due to migration of neutral alleles between once-isolated populations or to semi-isolation of neutral alleles. The observations of the pattern of allele variation in different populations, high levels of polymorphism in the marginal populations which have small population size and low levels of polymorphism of the X chromosome loci all support the argument in favor of balancing selection as the main mechanism for the maintenance of these polymorphisms. Environmental factors must play a role in the maintenance of a great deal of these polymorphisms, since we observe clinal allele frequency changes even within a given inversion type.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document