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Somatic Effects of P Element Activity in Drosophila melanogaster: Pupal Lethality
William R. Engels 1, Wendy K. Benz 1, Christine R. Preston 1, Patricia L. Graham 1, Randall W. Phillis 1, and Hugh M. Robertson 1
1 Genetics Department, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin
53706
Nonautonomous P elements normally excise and transpose
only when a source of transposase is supplied, and only in the germline. The
germline specificity depends on one of the introns of the transposase gene
which is not spliced in somatic cells. To study the effects of somatic P activity,
a modified P element (
2-3) lacking this intron was used as a
source of transposase. Nonautonomous P elements from a strain called
Birmingham, when mobilized in somatic cells by
2-3, were found to cause
lethality, although neither component was lethal by itself. The three major
Birmingham chromosomes acted approximately independently in producing the
lethal effect. This lethality showed a strong dependence on temperature. Although
temperature sensitivity was limited to larval stages, the actual deaths occurred
at the pupal stage. Survivors, which could be recovered by decreasing the
temperature or by reducing the proportion of the Birmingham genome present,
often showed multiple developmental anomalies and reduced longevity reminiscent
of the effects of cell death from radiation damage. Although the genetic damage
occurred in dividing imaginal disc cells, the phenotypic manifestationsdeath
and abnormalitiesare not observed until later. The survivors also showed
gonadal dysgenic (GD) sterility, a well-known characteristic of P-M hybrid
dysgenesis. To explain these findings, we suggest that pupal lethality and
GD sterility are both caused by massive chromosome breakage in larval cells,
resulting from excision and transposition of genomic P elements acting
as substrate for the transposase.
Accepted on September 4, 1987
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