Abstract

The rDNA content in Drosophila hydei has been compared in wild-type and in two translocation genotypes possessing only one nucleolus organizer. In highly polyploid salivary glands where rDNA is underreplicated, an 'independent polytenization' of the rDNA occurs resulting in about the same rDNA level in each genotype independently of the number of nucleolous organizers present in the genome. Thus, the situation in the salivary glands of D. hydei is similar to that in D. melanogaster (Spear and Gall 1973). In tetraploid thoracic muscle where rDNA is not underreplicated, the rDNA percentage in the two translocation genotypes is also considerably increased, although the wild-type level is not completely attained. This result shows that rDNA replication is independently controlled even in a non-underreplicating tissue. In larval diploid brain the situation in the two translocation stocks is dissimilar: in one genotype the rDNA content remains unaltered whereas in the other it is increased. This demonstrates for the first time that a gene compensation does occur in a diploid tissue.

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