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SPONTANEOUS UNSTABLE UNC-22 IV MUTATIONS IN C. ELEGANS VAR. BERGERAC
D. G. Moerman 1 and R. H. Waterston 1
1 Department of Genetics, Washington University School of Medicine,
St. Louis, Missouri 63110
This paper describes a mutator system in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans var. Bergerac for the gene unc-22. Of nine C. elegans and two C. briggsae strains tested only the Bergerac BO strain yielded mutant animals at a high frequency and the unc-22 IV gene is a preferred mutational target. The forward spontaneous mutation frequency at the unc-22 locus in Bergerac BO is about 1 x 10-4 , and most of these spontaneous unc-22 mutations revert at frequencies between 2 x 10-3 and 2 x 10 -4. Both the forward mutation frequency and the reversion frequency are sensitive to genetic background. Spontaneous unc-22 mutations derived in a Bergerac background and placed in a primarily Bristol background revert at frequencies of <10-6. When reintroduced into a Bergerac/Bristol hybrid background the mutations once again become unstable.
The mutator activity could not be localized to a discrete site in the Bergerac genome. Nor did mutator activity require the Bergerac unc-22 gene as a target since the Bristol unc-22 homolog placed in a Bergerac background also showed high mutation frequency. Intragenic mapping of two spontaneous unc-22 alleles, st136 and st137, place both mutations in the central region of the known unc-22 map. However, these mutations probably recombine with one another, suggesting that the unstable mutations can occur in more than one site in unc-22. Examination of the phenotypic effect of these mutations on muscle structure indicates that they are less severe in their effect than a known amber allele. We suggest that this mutator system is polygenic and dispersed over the nematode genome and could represent activity of the transposable element Tc1.
Submitted on April 30, 1984Accepted on August 23, 1984
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