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Genetics. 1987 Jun;116(2):321-30. doi: 10.1093/genetics/116.2.321.

Transmission of duplication-deficiencies from cotton translocations is unrelated to map lengths of the unbalanced segments.

Genetics

M Y Menzel, B J Dougherty

Affiliations

  1. Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32306-3050.

PMID: 17246386 PMCID: PMC1203142 DOI: 10.1093/genetics/116.2.321

Abstract

Adjacent-1 duplication-deficiencies (dp-dfs) are readily recovered from most heterozygous translocations in Gossypium hirsutum L., but frequencies of specific cytotypes differ widely in progenies from heterozygote (female symbol) x standard crosses. Surprisingly, these frequencies seem to be unrelated to the primary (postmeiotic) frequencies predicted by metaphase I configurations or to the proportion of the chromosome arm that is duplicate or deficient. Deficiencies and duplications from different translocations involving the same arm, as well as the two complementary dp-dfs from the same translocation, seldom exhibit similar frequencies. We conclude that the frequency of each of 101 different adjacent-1 cytotypes is largely idiosyncratic and may depend in part on interactions between the specific chromosome regions that are respectively trisegmental and monosegmental. Few, if any, of these interactions can be between homoeologues of the A(h) and D(h) genomes. Adjacent-2 dp-dfs are seldom recovered, even if they involve chromosomes that are readily tolerated in monosomic condition. Comparison of monosomes and telosomes with deficiencies suggests that some chromosomes and chromosome regions may be more dosage-sensitive than others, but their identification is not strongly supported by these data.

References

  1. Genetics. 1974 May;77(1):55-60 - PubMed
  2. Hereditas. 1980;93(1):1-46 - PubMed

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