Drosophila P elements were discovered because of a phenomenon called hybrid dysgenesis—sterility of particular hybrid progeny. When scientists in the 1970s crossed their D. melanogaster laboratory strains to flies of the same species obtained from natural environments outside the lab, they observed a remarkable result: The progeny of the crosses were sterile, but only when outside males were crossed with lab strain females. Progeny resulting from crosses of outside females with lab males were perfectly normal.
DNA analysis revealed that while the genomes of the outside flies contain P elements, the lab fly genomes have none. Apparently, P elements spread throughout the wild population of D. melanogaster after the capture of the originators of present-day laboratory strains over 100 years ago.
a. | The hybrid progeny are sterile because their germ-line cells have a high rate of mutation and chromosomal rearrangement (dysgenesis) caused by high rates of P element mobilization. Explain how P element movement can cause dysgenesis. |
b. | Scientists first hypothesized that the deposition of P element-encoded repressor protein (see Fig. 13.27) in egg cytoplasm is behind the observation that dysgenic progeny result only from crosses of laboratory females with outside males, and not vice versa. Explain this hypothesis. Why do the P elements mobilize when the cross occurs in one direction but not the other? (You will see in Chapter 17 that this hypothesis is correct, but it accounts for only part of the story.) |
c. | When males from certain outside strains are mated to lab females, the hybrid progeny are only partially sterile rather than completely sterile. Given this information, describe crosses that would allow you to isolate loss-of-function mutations in the X-linked Drosophila gene yellow that are caused by P element insertion. (These recessive mutant alleles will produce yellow rather than the wild-type tan body color.) At the molecular level, what do you think explains the difference between outside strains whose hybrid progeny are all sterile and outside strains whose progeny are only semisterile? |
d. | In wild-type fruit flies, researchers can observe rare patches on the bodies that have yellow rather than tan color. Interestingly, the frequency of these yellow patches did not increase in the progeny of a cross between outside males and lab females. What property of hybrid dysgenesis does this result suggest? |

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Chapter 13 Solutions
ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
- When using the concept of "a calorie in is equal to a calorie out" how important is the quality of the calories?arrow_forwardWhat did the Cre-lox system used in the Kikuchi et al. 2010 heart regeneration experiment allow researchers to investigate? What was the purpose of the cmlc2 promoter? What is CreER and why was it used in this experiment? If constitutively active Cre was driven by the cmlc2 promoter, rather than an inducible CreER system, what color would you expect new cardiomyocytes in the regenerated area to be no matter what? Why?arrow_forwardWhat kind of organ size regulation is occurring when you graft multiple organs into a mouse and the graft weight stays the same?arrow_forward
- What is the concept "calories consumed must equal calories burned" in regrads to nutrition?arrow_forwardYou intend to insert patched dominant negative DNA into the left half of the neural tube of a chick. 1) Which side of the neural tube would you put the positive electrode to ensure that the DNA ends up on the left side? 2) What would be the internal (within the embryo) control for this experiment? 3) How can you be sure that the electroporation method itself is not impacting the embryo? 4) What would you do to ensure that the electroporation is working? How can you tell?arrow_forwardDescribe a method to document the diffusion path and gradient of Sonic Hedgehog through the chicken embryo. If modifying the protein, what is one thing you have to consider in regards to maintaining the protein’s function?arrow_forward
- The following table is from Kumar et. al. Highly Selective Dopamine D3 Receptor (DR) Antagonists and Partial Agonists Based on Eticlopride and the D3R Crystal Structure: New Leads for Opioid Dependence Treatment. J. Med Chem 2016.arrow_forwardThe following figure is from Caterina et al. The capsaicin receptor: a heat activated ion channel in the pain pathway. Nature, 1997. Black boxes indicate capsaicin, white circles indicate resinferatoxin. You are a chef in a fancy new science-themed restaurant. You have a recipe that calls for 1 teaspoon of resinferatoxin, but you feel uncomfortable serving foods with "toxins" in them. How much capsaicin could you substitute instead?arrow_forwardWhat protein is necessary for packaging acetylcholine into synaptic vesicles?arrow_forward
- 1. Match each vocabulary term to its best descriptor A. affinity B. efficacy C. inert D. mimic E. how drugs move through body F. how drugs bind Kd Bmax Agonist Antagonist Pharmacokinetics Pharmacodynamicsarrow_forward50 mg dose of a drug is given orally to a patient. The bioavailability of the drug is 0.2. What is the volume of distribution of the drug if the plasma concentration is 1 mg/L? Be sure to provide units.arrow_forwardDetermine Kd and Bmax from the following Scatchard plot. Make sure to include units.arrow_forward
- Human Heredity: Principles and Issues (MindTap Co...BiologyISBN:9781305251052Author:Michael CummingsPublisher:Cengage LearningBiology: The Dynamic Science (MindTap Course List)BiologyISBN:9781305389892Author:Peter J. Russell, Paul E. Hertz, Beverly McMillanPublisher:Cengage LearningBiology (MindTap Course List)BiologyISBN:9781337392938Author:Eldra Solomon, Charles Martin, Diana W. Martin, Linda R. BergPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Human Biology (MindTap Course List)BiologyISBN:9781305112100Author:Cecie Starr, Beverly McMillanPublisher:Cengage LearningBiology: The Unity and Diversity of Life (MindTap...BiologyISBN:9781305073951Author:Cecie Starr, Ralph Taggart, Christine Evers, Lisa StarrPublisher:Cengage LearningBiology 2eBiologyISBN:9781947172517Author:Matthew Douglas, Jung Choi, Mary Ann ClarkPublisher:OpenStax





