PARACENTRIC INVERSIONS AND DETECTION OF SEX LINKED RECESSIVE LETHALS IN AEDES AEGYPTI

1970 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 635-650 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satish C. Bhalla

Two sex linked paracentric inversions one on m chromosome, marked with bz (bronze body) and the other on M chromosome, marked with w (white eye), were artificially induced with X-irradiation and isolated. The inversions are designated as In. (1)1 and In. (1)2 respectively. The former is more than 23 units long and the later more than 16 units. Both suppress crossing over markedly and are associated with partial sterility. The two inversions are utilized as crossover suppressors in a technique designed for detecting sex linked recessive lethals. The technique works satisfactorily with certain limitations. The possibility of combining inversions with other chromosomal aberrations for genetic control of Aedes aegypti populations is suggested.

Genetics ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 605-627
Author(s):  
Etta Käfer

ABSTRACT To analyze mitotic recombination in translocation heterozygotes of A. nidulans two sets of well-marked diploids were constructed, homo- or heterozygous for the reciprocal translocations T1(IL;VIIR) or T2(IL;VIIIR) and heterozygous for selective markers on IL. It was found that from all translocation heterozygotes some of the expected mitotic crossover types could be selected. Such crossovers are monosomic for one translocated segment and trisomic for the other and recovery depends on the relative viabilities of these unbalanced types. The obtained segregants show characteristically reduced growth rates and conidiation dependent on sizes and types of mono- and trisomic segments, and all spontaneously produce normal diploid sectors. Such secondary diploid types either arose in one step of compensating crossing over in the other involved arm, or—more conspicuously—in two steps of nondisjunction via a trisomic intermediate.—In both of the analyzed translocations the segments translocated to IL were extremely long, while those translocated from IL were relatively short. The break in I for T1(I;VII) was located distal to the main selective marker in IL, while that of T2(I;VIII) had been mapped proximal but closely linked to it. Therefore, as expected, the selected primary crossover from the two diploids with T2(I;VIII) in coupling or in repulsion to the selective marker, showed the same chromosomal imbalance and poor growth. These could however be distinguished visually because they spontaneously produced different trisomic intermediates in the next step, in accordance with the different arrangement of the aneuploid segments. On the other hand, from diploids heterozygous for T1(I;VII) mitotic crossovers could only be selected when the selective markers were in coupling with the translocation; these crossovers were relatively well-growing and produced frequent secondary segregants of the expected trisomic, 2n+VII, type. For both translocations it was impossible to recover the reciprocal crossover types (which would be trisomic for the distal segments of I and monosomic for most of groups VII or VIII) presumably because these were too inviable to form conidia.—In addition to the selected segregants of expected types a variety of unexpected ones were isolated. The conditions of selection used favour visual detection of aneuploid types, even if these produce only a few conidial heads and are not at a selective advantage. For T2(I;VIII) these "non-selected" unbalanced segregants were mainly "reciprocal" crossovers of the same phenotype and imbalance as the selected ones. For T1(I;VII) two quite different types were obtained, both possibly originating with loss of the small VII-Itranslocation chromosome. One was isolated when the selective marker in repulsion to T1(I;VII) was used and, without being homo- or hemizygous for the selective marker, it produced stable sectors homozygous for this marker. The other was obtained from both coupling and repulsion diploids and showed a near-diploid genotype; it produced practically only haploid stable sectors of the type expected from monosomics, 2n-1 for the short translocation chromosome.


1981 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 315-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Józefa Styrna ◽  
Jan Klein

SUMMARYFour new t haplotypes, tTu1 through tTu4, are described, three of them derived from the tw12tf haplotype and one (tTu4) from the tw2 haplotype. The tTu1 and tTu4 haplotypes cause taillessness in T/tTu1 or T/tTu4 heterozygotes, lack the lethality factor, weakly suppress recombination in the T−H−2 interval, and are transmitted to offspring from tTu/ + males at nearly Mendelian ratios. The tTu3 haplotype resembles tTu1 and tTu4 except for the fact that the T/tTu3 heterozygotes have normal-length tails. The tTu2 haplotype probably carries the lethal factor of tTu12tf, suppresses crossing-over in the T-H-2 and tf-H-2 intervals, and displays a slightly subnormal transmission ratio. In the compound heterozygote tTu1/tTu2, the male transmission ratio of the tTu1 chromosome is close to that of the original tTu12tf haplotype. A similar effect is observed in the tTu3/tTu2 heterozygote. This observation is interpreted as evidence for two regions within the t complex controlling the male transmission ratios. One of the regions is close to the tail-modifying region, the other is close to the lethality factor. Our findings parallel closely those made in the segregation distorter system in Drosophila.


2012 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 126
Author(s):  
Yekki Yasmin ◽  
Lenni Fitri ◽  
Betty Mauliya Bustam

This research is about effectivity analysis of two kinds of fungi i.e. Beauveria bassiana and Metharrizium anisopliae as Aedes aegyptilarvacide, it has been conducted at laboratories Zoology in Biology Department, Mathematics and Natural Sciences Faculty, Syiah KualaUniversity. Aims of this research were estimating maximum time storage of fungi powder as effective larvacide and the number of bacteriacolonies were found in water used for experiment. This research was used Completely Randomized Design (CRD). The experiments consistof two factors i.e kind and saving time of fungi. The result show that the longer the storage time of Beauveria bassiana the more ineffectiveit was as larvacide and the least fungi colonies were found. Metharrizium anisopliae on the other hand, the longer it was kept, the moreeffective it was as larvacide and the more fungi colonies were found.


2004 ◽  
Vol 50 (5) ◽  
pp. 321-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Echigo ◽  
S. Itoh ◽  
T. Natsui ◽  
T. Araki ◽  
R. Ando

The activity inducing chromosomal aberrations of the mixture of brominated disinfection by-products (DBPs) was approximately three times higher than that of the chlorinated counterparts for the same hypohalous acid dose. With the combination of chromosomal aberration test and a new analytical technique to differentiate total organic chlorine (TOCl) and total organic bromine (TOBr), it was found that TOBr was correlated to the mutagenicity of chlorinated waters. It was also implied that for a bromide-to-TOC ratio of 0.1 (mg/mg C), brominated DBPs could account for at least 29% of the total toxicity of DBPs formed during chlorination. On the other hand, bromate ion, a major ozonation DBP, was not a major contributor to the activity inducing chromosomal aberrations of the water treated with an ozone/chlorine sequential process. Therefore, ozonation is one possible option to reduce the health risk caused by DBPs even in the presence of bromide.


Blood ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 687-696 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Zech ◽  
C Gahrton ◽  
D Killander ◽  
S Franzen ◽  
U Haglund

Abstract The chromosomes of bone marrow cells from ten patients with polycythemia vera (PV) were identified by Q-, G-, and C-banding techniques. Four of the patients had received no treatment with cytotoxic drugs, while three had received 32P only and the other three, in addition, had received busulfan or busulfan and procarbazine. One 73- yr-old male patient treated with venesection only for 4 yr lacked the Y chromosome and had a deletion of the long arm of chromosome 20 (20q-) in all cells investigated. One of the other three patients who had received no drugs had a chromosome abnormality, but only in 1 of 19 identifiable metaphases. However, the abnormality was the same (+9) as the most common one in treated patients. In the group of treated patients, an extra chromosome 9 (+9) was found in three patients, an extra chromosome 8 (+8) in one, and a deletion of the long arm of one chromosome 20 (20q-) in one patient. Multiple aberrations in addition to the extra chromosome 9 were found in one patient in whom the disease had transformed into acute myeloblastic leukemia. The finding of identical chromosomal aberrations (20q- and +9, respectively) in two patients who had received no drugs and in four patients who had received 32P and busulfan or procarbazine favors the view that these aberrations are specifically associated with the disease and not induced by the drugs. With the exception of the patient with acute myeloblastic leukemia, all other patients are alive 1–11 mo after chromosome analyses and 1–229 mo after diagnosis.


1971 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. L. Zartman ◽  
N. S. Fechheimer ◽  
L. N. Baker

2015 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 618-628 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Gorman ◽  
Josué Young ◽  
Lleysa Pineda ◽  
Ricardo Márquez ◽  
Nestor Sosa ◽  
...  

Genetics ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 104 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-112
Author(s):  
Claude W Hinton

ABSTRACT Several stocks, selected because they carried previously identified factors governing either crossing over in males or mutability, were examined to determine whether the effects of these factors are restricted to one or the other process. Neither of two dominant enhancers of male crossing over had detectable effects on Minute mutation frequencies among progenies of assayed F1 males. Genetically equivalent F1 males monitored for crossing over showed no unequivocal effect of either of three mutators (two dominant and one extrachromosomal) or of a suppressor of mutability. However, one combination of a dominant crossover enhancer with a dominant mutator showed synergistic increases in both crossover and Minute frequencies, and the possibility exists that a single extrachromosomally transmitted element suppresses both male crossing over and mutability. This suppressor element (or elements) had been previously diagnosed in the pc stock which, in this study, was discovered to have also a dominant enhancer of male crossing over and a dominant mutator occupying separable loci in the third chromosome. The pc enhancer of male crossing over differs from the dominant enhancer in another stock with respect to the regional distribution of crossovers, and the pc mutator is distinguished from another 3-linked mutator by its preferential induction of mutations at the Delta locus.


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