|
|
||||||||
|
Reply: On the Possible Occurrence of Conversion Polarity at the bronze LocusHugo K. Dooneraa The Waksman Institute Rutgers University Piscataway, NJ 08855 dooner@mbcl.rutgers.edu
Based principally on the results from bz-m1/bz-m2(DI) and bz-m1/bz-m2(DII) heterozygotes, Thijs and Heyting have raised the possibility that there is 5' to 3' polarity of meiotic gene conversion at the bronze (bz) locus. This possibility has been addressed previously ( The discrepancy between the two parentally marked Bz intragenic recombinants (IGRs) in bz-m1/bz-m2(DI) and bz-m1/bz-m2(DII) heterozygotes is, admittedly, large. These heterozygotes are structurally identical because the only difference between bz-m2(DI) and bz-m2(DII) is the size of the Ds insertion (3.3 and 3.9 kb, respectively) that was generated by internal deletion of the Ac element in the autonomous bz-m2 allele.
What is it about this heterozygote that leads to a difference in the recovery of parental types? We do not know, but we can offer an hypothesis. Both chromosomes in the heterozygote have large and extensively homologous Ds insertions ( One way to assess the effect of each insertion individually is to compare the progeny of test crosses involving bz-m1/bz-m2(Ds) heterozygotes with those resulting from test crosses involving bz-m1/bz-s2 and bz-s1/bz-m2(Ds) heterozygotes, in which the bz-s alleles have arisen by excision of the respective insertions. These bz-s excision alleles carry small transposon footprints (usually 8 bp) at the site previously occupied by the transposon, and for all practical purposes they can be treated as point mutations. Preliminary data from bz-m1/bz-s2 heterozygotes (H.K. Dooner, unpublished results) show no clear parental type majority among Bz IGRs, supporting our contention that the preferential recovery of bz-m1 parental types may be unique to bz-m1/bz-m2(Ds) heterozygotes.
I agree with Thijs and Heyting that the data from the latter heterozygotes suggest preferential conversion of the proximal allele. However, the number of parentally marked Bz IGRs from the other allelic combinations is too low to make meaningful comparisons. For example, if the data presented by
Furthermore, if the data from heterozygotes between Mu1 insertions and bz-E point mutations are examined, the opposite pattern seems to hold (
Thijs and Heyting also state that the patterns of polymorphisms in the Bz IGRs we have analyzed (see Figures 4 and 5 in To recapitulate, the various bodies of data accumulated by us over the years do not show any consistent pattern of conversion (or recombination) polarity at the bz locus. In the absence of any evidence for polarity, there is no need to postulate a fixed initiation site for meiotic recombination at bz. I maintain that the simplest interpretation of our observations is that recombination initiates randomly within the gene.
REFERENCES
Dooner, H.K. (1986) Genetic fine structure of the bronze locus in maize. Genetics 113:1021-1036
Dooner, H.K., and Kermicle, J.L. (1986) The transposable element Ds affects the pattern of intragenic recombination at the bz and R loci in maize. Genetics 113:135-143 Dooner, H.K., and Martínez-Férez, I.M. (1997) Recombination occurs uniformly within the bronze gene, a meiotic recombination hotspot in the maize genome. Plant Cell 9:1633-1646[Abstract]. Dooner, H.K., and Ralston, E. (1990) Effect of the Mu1 insertion on intragenic recombination at the bz locus in maize. Maydica 35:333-337.
Dooner, H.K., English, J., Ralston, E., and Weck, E. (1986) A single genetic unit specifies two transposition functions in the maize element Activator.. Science 234:210-211 Martínez-Férez, I.M., and Dooner, H.K. (1997) Sesqui-Ds, the chromosome-breaking insertion at bz-m1, links double Ds to the original Ds element. Mol. Gen. Genet. 255:580-586[CrossRef][Medline].
This article has been cited by other articles:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | THE PLANT CELL | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY | |
|---|---|---|---|