Molecular genetics of the Posterior sex combs/Suppressor 2 of zeste region of Drosophila: aberrant expression of the Suppressor 2 of zeste gene results in abnormal bristle development. (original) (raw)

Journal Article

,

Search for other works by this author on:

,

Search for other works by this author on:

Search for other works by this author on:

Cite

B P Brunk, E C Martin, P N Adler, Molecular genetics of the Posterior sex combs/Suppressor 2 of zeste region of Drosophila: aberrant expression of the Suppressor 2 of zeste gene results in abnormal bristle development., Genetics, Volume 128, Issue 1, 1 May 1991, Pages 119–132, https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/128.1.119
Close

Navbar Search Filter Mobile Enter search term Search

Abstract

We report the molecular characterization of the Posterior sex combs-Suppressor 2 of zeste region of Drosophila melanogaster. The distal breakpoint of the Aristapedioid inversion divides the region into two parts. We have molecularly mapped the lesions associated with several loss of function mutations in the Polycomb group gene Posterior sex combs (Psc) proximal to this breakpoint. In addition, we have found that lesions associated with several loss of function mutations in the Suppressor 2 of zeste [Su(z)2] gene lie distal to this breakpoint. Since the breakpoint does not cause a loss of function in either gene, no essential sequences are shared by these two neighboring genes. There are three dominant gain of function mutations in the region that result in abnormal bristle development. We find that all three juxtapose foreign DNA sequences upstream of the Su(z)2 gene, and that at least two of these mutations (Arp1 and vgD) behave genetically as gain of function mutations in Su(z)2. Northern and in situ hybridization analyses show that the mutations result in increased accumulation of the Su(z)2 mRNA, which we argue is responsible for the bristle loss phenotype.

This content is only available as a PDF.

© Genetics 1991

Citations

Views

Altmetric

Metrics

Total Views 104

0 Pageviews

104 PDF Downloads

Since 1/1/2021

Month: Total Views:
January 2021 5
February 2021 2
March 2021 1
July 2021 1
October 2021 2
November 2021 3
December 2021 1
January 2022 1
April 2022 2
May 2022 2
June 2022 2
July 2022 1
August 2022 2
November 2022 4
January 2023 3
February 2023 1
April 2023 1
June 2023 4
July 2023 10
September 2023 2
October 2023 1
November 2023 2
December 2023 4
January 2024 5
March 2024 2
April 2024 7
May 2024 1
June 2024 2
July 2024 16
August 2024 4
September 2024 3
October 2024 5
November 2024 2

×

Email alerts

Citing articles via

More from Oxford Academic