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. 1979 Jul;61(2):229-48.
doi: 10.1016/0027-5107(79)90130-1.

Is there a proportionality between the spontaneous and the X-ray-induction rates of mutations? Experiments with mutations at 13 X-chromosome loci in Drosophila melanogaster

Is there a proportionality between the spontaneous and the X-ray-induction rates of mutations? Experiments with mutations at 13 X-chromosome loci in Drosophila melanogaster

P T Shukla et al. Mutat Res. 1979 Jul.

Abstract

The X-ray induction of recessive visible specific locus mutations at 14 X-chromsome loci was studied in Drosophila melanogaster using the "Maxy" technique. The X-ray exposure was 3000 R to 5-day-old males and the sampling of germ cells was restricted to mature spermatozoa. Presumptive mutant females recovered in the F1 generation were tested for transmission, allelism, fertility and viability in males. A total of 128 mutations (115 completes and 13 mosaics including those that were male viable as well as male-lethal) recovered among 38 898 female progeny were found to be transmitted. On the basis of the above frequency, the average mutation rate can be estimated as 7.8 X 10(-8)/locus/R; for mutations that were viable and fertile in males, the rate is 3.0 X 10(-5)/locus/R (49 mutations among 38 898 progeny). The frequency of mutations at the different loci encompassed a wide range: while no mutations were recovered at the raspberry and carnation loci, at others, the numbers ranged from 1 at echinus to 31 at garnet; in addition, the proportion of mutations that was male-viable was also different, depending on the locus. Schalet's extensive data on spontaneous mutations at 13 (of the 14 loci employed in the present study) loci permit an estimate of the spontaneous rate which is 6.1 X 10(-6)/locus (a total of39 mutations among 490 000 progeny); for mutations that were viable and fertile in males, the rate is 3.0 X 10(-6)/locus (19 mutations among 490 000 progeny). The mutability of the different loci varied over a 9-fold range. When the different loci are ranked depending on their relative mutability (for spontaneous and induced mutations) it is found that in general, loci that mutate spontaneously relatively more frequently are also those at which more mutations have been recovered in the radiation experiments and likewise, those that are less mutable spontaneously are also those that mutate less after irradiation. Since the data are limited, it is concluded that the above finding is not inconsistent with the assumption of proportionality between spontaneous and induction rates of mutations. On the basis of the above results, a doubling dose of 100 R can be calculated for the X-ray induction of specific-locus mutations in Drosophila spermatozoa.

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