Abstract

Females of Drosophila melanogaster, homozygous for the abnormal oocyte mutation (abo 2; 44) produce eggs with a greatly reduced probability of developing into adults compared with those of control females. After several generations in abo homozygous stocks, the abo maternal effect is no longer observed. The progressive amelioration of the abo maternal effect in the Canton S background, into which the abo mutation was introduced, was concomitant with an increase in rDNA and variation in the rDNA restriction pattern. To clarify the relationship between the loss of the abo phenotype and the change in rDNA redundancy, we performed genetic and molecular analyses using abo stocks carrying X chromosomes of different origin and carrying different amounts of rDNA. The results we present confirm, in different genetic backgrounds, the previous observations on the behaviour of the abo mutation. However, both the amount and the restriction pattern of rDNA of the different X chromosomes studied remain unchanged after the loss of the abo phenotype. From these observations, it appears that changes in heterochromatic regions other than rDNA are responsible for the loss of the abo maternal effect.

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