Abstract

AbstractThree new mutant alleles of maize alcohol dehydrogenase‐1 (Adh 1) were recovered following allyl alcohol selection of pollen. Each is altered in quantitative, organ‐specific, regulatory properties. All mutant sites act in cis to the structural gene component. One mutant arose spontaneously, one followed indirectly from irradiation with high Z accelerated particles, and one was induced by an autonomous mutator system. Each mutant is assessed in three organs by utilizing ADH allozyme ratios that were quantified at the level of ADH enzyme activity and either [3H]‐Leu incorporation into newly synthesized ADH 1 subunits or direct protein determinations. One mutation simultaneously raises Adh 1 expression in one organ and lowers it in another, another affects expression in one organ only, and another is extremely underexpressed in all organs but is unstable. This unstable allele has generated derivative mutant alleles that have less or zero ADH expression. We do not yet know whether or not coding sequences are involved in these mutants. We conclude that information for organ specificity and quantitative behavior resides near or within Adh 1 coding sequences.

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