Thirty mutants of α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (αGPDH, EC 1.1.1.8) from Drosophila melanogaster were produced with the chemical mutagen ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS). These mutants and nine others previously obtained have been characterized with respect to level of enzymatic activity, viability, flight ability, and presence of cross-reacting material (CRM). The presence of αGPDH mRNA in several of the mutants has been tested by in vitro translation. There are strong correlations between the level of enzyme activity, viability and flight ability. Thirteen of the mutants are CRM- by solution immunoprecipitation experiments, but of these, only three are CRM- by a more sensitive 125I-protein A-based radioimmune gel assay. The viability of the three CRM- mutants suggests that the absence of αGPDH protein is not a lethal condition. The immunoprecipitated protein of the low activity mutant, αGpdhnGL3, has a smaller apparent molecular weight on polyacrylamide-SDS gels than does the protein from wild type. Criteria for the identification of nonsense mutations in Drosophila are discussed.
The chromosomal region surrounding the structural gene for α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (αGpdh, 2-20.5) of Drosophila melanogaster has been studied in detail. Forty-three EMS-induced recessive lethal mutations and five previously identified visible mutations have been localized within the 25A-27D region of chromosome 2 by deficiency mapping and in some cases by a recombination analysis. The 43 lethal mutations specify 17 lethal loci. ?Gpdh has been localized to a single polytene chromosome band, 25F5, and there apparently are no lethals that map to the αGpdh locus.
We examined P factor induced mutations of the Zw gene of Drosophila melanogaster in order to learn more about the site specificity of such mutations. Approximately 70,000 chromosomes were screened using a powerful positive selection scheme. As only two mutants were discovered, Zw is a "cold spot" for transposable element insertion. One mutation involved a complex P element associated chromosomal rearrangement which was used to define the orientation of the gene with respect to the centromere of the X chromosome. The second mutation was either a simple, non-dysgenically induced point mutation or a very unstable insertion.
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