Abstract

Fractionation of total adult DNA of five of the seven species of the melanogaster species sub-group of Drosophila in actinomycin D and distamycin A caesium density gradients has revealed the presence of three main-band DNA components, common to all species, and ten satellite DNAs that are distributed between the species. Satellite DNAs are either unique to a species or common to two or more species. The abundance of a common satellite DNA varies between species. There is no simple relationship between the presence of a satellite DNA and a branch point of phylogenetic divergence; nevertheless the arrangement of the species in a phylogeny that is based on the numbers of satellites held in common accurately reflects the pattern of relationships between the same species based on differences in inversions of polytene chromosomes. The species can be similarly arranged according to the compositions of their mitochondrial DNAs. It is possible that the same basic set of sequences, each of low frequency, is common to all species with arbitrary or selected amplification of particular sequences to differing extents in individual species. The conservation of satellites in the group and the close parallel between the distributions of satellites and inversions between the species suggests that either the processes that operate to change both chromosomal phenomena are similarly time-dependent and occurring at relatively low rates or that their rates of change are restricted according to some undetermined functions of these aspects of the genome.

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