Genetics. Published Articles Ahead of Print: September 15, 2004, Copyright © 2004
doi:10.1534/genetics.104.031815


A more recent version of this article appeared on January 1, 2005.


Regular Research Papers

Non-Mendelian inheritance induced by gene amplification in the germ nucleus of Paramecium tetraurelia

1 Purdue University
2 University of Tsukuba

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mihoko{at}biol.tsukuba.ac.jp.

Submitted on June 12, 2004
Revised on August 8, 2004
Accepted on 9 September 2004


Abstract

A genetic investigation of strain d4-95, which carries a recessive mutant allele (pwB95) of pawn-B, one of the controlling elements of voltage-dependent calcium channels in Paramecium tetraurelia, revealed a non-Mendelian feature. Progeny of the cross between d4-95 and wild type often expressed a clonally stable mutant phenotype, even when they had a wild-type gene.The mutant phenotype was also expressed after self-fertilization of theoretical wild-type homozygotes recovered from the cross. Our molecular analysis demonstrated that the copy number of the mutant pwB gene in the micro- and macronucleus of d4-95 was much greater than that of the wild type. Most of the amplified, extra pwB gene copies in d4-95 were heritable independently from the original pwB locus. Repeated backcrossing of d4-95 with the wild type to dilute extra pwB genes in the strain produced segregants with a completely normal Mendelian trait in testcrosses. These results strongly suggest that a non-Mendelian inheritance of d4-95 was induced by gene amplification in the micronucleus.

Key Words: Behavioral mutant, Gene amplification, Non-Mendelian inheritance, Paramecium