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Genetics, Vol 136, 559-571, Copyright © 1994
INVESTIGATIONS |
Modification of the Drosophila Heterochromatic Mutation brown(Dominant) by Linkage Alterations
P. B. Talbert, CDS. LeCiel and S. Henikoff
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington 98104 Present address: University of Washington, Department of Botany KB-15, Seattle, Washington 98195.
The variegating mutation brown(Dominant) (bw(D)) of Drosophila melanogaster is associated with an insertion of heterochromatin into chromosome arm 2R at 59E, the site of the bw gene. Mutagenesis produced 150 dominant suppressors of bw(D) variegation. These fall into two classes: unlinked suppressors, which also suppress other variegating mutations; and linked chromosome rearrangements, which suppress only bw(D). Some rearrangements are broken at 59E, and so might directly interfere with variegation caused by the heterochromatic insertion at that site. However, most rearrangements are translocations broken proximal to bw within the 52D-57D region of 2R. Translocation breakpoints on the X chromosome are scattered throughout the X euchromatin, while those on chromosome 3 are confined to the tips. This suggests that a special property of the X chromosome suppresses bw(D) variegation, as does a distal autosomal location. Conversely, two enhancers of bw(D) are caused by translocations from the same part of 2R to proximal heterochromatin, bringing the bw(D) heterochromatic insertion close to the chromocenter with which it strongly associates. These results support the notion that heterochromatin formation at a genetic locus depends on its location within the nucleus.
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