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THE INSTABILITY OF NEUROSPORA DUPLICATION Dp(IL
IR)H4250
, AND ITS GENETIC CONTROL
Dorothy Newmeyer 1 and Donna R. Galeazzi 1
1 Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford,
California 94305
Previous work (Newmeyer and Taylor 1967)
showed that a nontandem duplication, Dp(IL
IR)H4250, is regularly
produced by recombination in crosses heterozygous for the effectively terminal
pericentric inversion In(IL
IR)H4250. The duplications initially
have strongly inhibited growth because they are heterozygous for mating type,
which behaves like a vegetative-incompatibility (het) locus. Such
cultures "escape" from the inhibition as a result of events that eliminate
the mating-type heterozygosity. The product of a given escape event may be
barren or fertile. (Neurospora duplications are characteristically barren;
that is, when crossed, they make many perithecia but few ascospores.)The
present paper reports on a genetic analysis of the instability of Dp(IL
IR)H4250
. Most of the barren escape products behave as if due either to mitotic
crossovers, which make mating type and distal markers homozygous, or to very
long deletions which uncover mating type and all distal markers; presumably
the latter would retain enough duplicated material to render them barren.
It is difficult to distinguish between these two possibilities, but homozygosis
seems more probable and has been clearly demonstrated in one case. Only a
few barren escapes could be due to short deletions or to changes at the mating-type
locus.The fertile escape products appear to be euploid. Most of these
behave as if they arose by precise deletion of one or the other duplicated
segment, thus restoring one of the parental sequences. A large majority of
the precise deletions restore normal sequence; only a few restore inversion
sequence. Preferential restoration of the normal sequence has also been found
by other workers for Neurospora duplications from several other rearrangements.
A hypothesis is presented to explain these findings; it is posulated that
the precise deletions result from mitotic crossing over in homologous material
located at chromosome tips and tip-break-points.There is a smaller
group of fertile escapes that are unlike either parental sequence; at least
one of these involves a chromosome break outside the duplicated region.Duplications
in which the vegetative incompatibility is suppressed by the unlinked modifier
tol are extremely barren; they only rarely lose a duplicated segment
so as to become fertile.The instability of Dp(IL
IR)H4250
, with and without tol, is markedly altered by factors in the
genetic background. The two factors studied in detail have qualitatively different
effects.
Revised on November 19, 1976
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E. B. Cambareri, R. Aisner, and J. Carbon Structure of the Chromosome VII Centromere Region in Neurospora crassa: Degenerate Transposons and Simple Repeats Mol. Cell. Biol., September 1, 1998; 18(9): 5465 - 5477. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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