Abstract

Colcemid, a chemical closely related to colchicine, was fed to Drosophila melanogaster females (0.0001 and 0.0005%, respectively). In the F1 the frequency of aneuploid males (XO karyotype) and aneuploid females (either of the XXY or of the XXXY karyotype, with 2 and 3 sets of autosomes, respectively) was significantly higher than in the controls as shown by genetical methods supplemented by cytological tests. A consistent brood pattern effect was observed, possibly but not necessarily reflecting differential stage sensitivity to the action of colcemid. It seems plausible to assume that most of the aneuploid exceptions were produced via colcemid-induced spindle defects leading to lagging of the X-chromosome. Exclusion of the lagging X from the pronucleus (or its precursors) would yield XO males, its inclusion would yield XXY females. Definitely more XO than XXY exceptions were observed.

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