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- Articles by Daud, F.
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SPONTANEOUS IR DUPLICATIONS GENERATED AT MITOSIS IN ASPERGILLUS NIDULANS: FURTHER EVIDENCE OF A PREFERENTIAL SITE OF TRANSPOSED ATTACHMENT
F. Daud 1, G. S. Ortori 1, and J. A. Roper 1
1 Department of Genetics, The University, Sheffield S10 2TN,
England
A radiation-induced translocation, T(IIR
IIIL), has been shown to be nonreciprocal and to have most of IIR
, including its terminus, attached uninverted to the terminus of
IIIL.Progeny with the IIR segment in duplicate, obtained
from crosses of T(IIR
IIIL) to strains with
a standard genome, were unstable at mitosis; like earlier duplication strains,
they suffered deletions from either duplicate segment. Frequent mitotic crossing
over occurred between the duplicate IIR segments so that, following
deletions, more than two classes of stable, balanced products arose from each
heterozygous duplication strain. Spontaneous, mitotically arising duplications
of the IR segment, bearing the rate-limiting adE20 allele,
can be selected on adenine-free medium on which they emerge as vigorous sectors
from the stunted adE20 colony. It was shown previously that most
such duplications, when selected from a strain with standard genome, had the
terminal IR segment attached to the end of IIR. Selection
has now been made from an adE20 strain carrying T(IIR
IIIL), and seven of the 13 independent IR duplications
were linked to the III-IIR translocation complex. In three strains
analyzed further, the duplicate IR segments, which included the
IR terminus, were attached uninverted to the terminus of IIR;
the segments of IR were of approximately equal genetic length.This
supports earlier suggestions that there is a preferential site for the initiation
of IR duplications and a preferential site, the IIR terminus,
for their attachment.
Accepted on February 7, 1985