Abstract

The effects of chromosomal rearrangements pn2, pn3, TE100 and TE101 on variegation of the gene Pgd, which controls the synthesis of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (PGD), were studied in Drosophila melanogaster. The electrophoretic patterns of PGD activity were first examined at different developmental stages. The degree of variegation of Pgd caused by pn2 and pn3 was higher in adult flies (the calculated percentage of cells with inactive Pgd was 70%–80%) as compared with larvae (about 50%). This difference can be explained by the tissue-specific mosaicism of Pgd expression; variegation was high in the neural ganglia, imaginal discs, and posterior gut but relatively low in the salivary glands, fat bodies and Malpighian tubes. In the case of TE100, neither tissue specificity, nor marked differences in the degree of variegation between larvae and adults were found. None of the rearrangements examined had an effect on the expression of Pgd in the ovary cells, but repression was seen in some cells of the male gonads. The data obtained suggest that the timing of clonal initiation is influenced by the rearrangements studied. The possible mechanisms preventing changes in the expression of the Pgd gene in the nurse cells caused by these rearrangements are discussed.

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