Abstract

The tumorous-head maternal effect in Drosophila melanogaster is produced by a recessive gene (tuh-1) in chromosome 1. Polymorphism exists at this locus. This maternal effect, which is part of the normal variation found in this species, is detected with the aid of a mutant gene. In the presence of the maternal effect, a semi-dominant mutant gene (tuh-3) causes homoeotic changes in the eye-antennal imaginal discs. The phenotype in the adult is known as the tumorous-head abnormality. The mutant gene, which is located in the right arm of chromosome 3, is characterized by reduced penetrance. Using the penetrance of the mutant gene as the criterion, the results of these experiments show that the level of the maternal effect activity is influenced remarkably by modifiers present in wild type strains. The assay is to mate females homozygous for tuh-1 with males homozygous for tuh-3 and to determine the percent of the offspring showing the tumorous head abnormality. Using this procedure, it was observed that parental females with various combinations of chromosomes 1 and 3 from Lausanne and Stephenville wild type strains show great variability in the level of maternal effect activity. Modifiers in chromosome 1 and 3 from the Stephenville strain increase the level of the maternal effect activity. The level is reduced if these chromosomes are replaced by those from the Lausanne strain. A major locus in chromosome 3 is in the same region occupied by clusters of functionally related genes with regulating action. These results demonstrate that the penetrance of a mutant gene, which acts during embryogenesis, is influenced by modifiers which act during oogenesis.

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