Abstract

In Drosophila melanogaster, the P-M system of hybrid dysgenesis is a syndrome of germ line abnormalities, including temperature dependent gonadal dysgenesis (GD sterility), high rates of mutation and male recombination, which occurs in some interstrain hybrids but only from one of the two crosses. In the P-M system, hybrid dysgenesis results from interaction between chromosomally transposable elements of the P element family and a particular extrachromosomal state referred to as the M cytotype. Cytotype (M or P) is known to be determined by the absence or presence of chromosomal factors, but principally with limited cytoplasmic transmission. In a series of experiments in which F1 hybrid females from various P and M strains were submitted to different preadult and ageing temperature treatments, it was found that the cytotype switch is strongly temperature-dependent in the F1 females from M female X P male but not in the reciprocal cross. In the F1 females from the former cross, a strong M cytotype occurs at a low developmental temperature (18 degrees C) and a weak M cytotype occurs at a high developmental temperature (26.5 degrees C). On the other hand, a high ageing temperature applied after a low developmental temperature switches the cytotype from M to P and reciprocally, a low ageing temperature applied after a high developmental temperature switches the cytotype from P to M.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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