Characterization of enhancer-of-white-apricot in Drosophila melanogaster.

TitleCharacterization of enhancer-of-white-apricot in Drosophila melanogaster.
Publication TypeJournal Articles
Year of Publication1990
AuthorsPeng XB, Mount SM
JournalGeneticsGenetics
Volume126
Issue4
Pagination1061 - 1069
Date Published1990/12/01/
ISBN Number0016-6731, 1943-2631
Abstract

The white-apricot (w(a)) allele differs from the wild-type white gene by the presence of the retrovirus-like transposable element copia within the transcription unit. Most RNAs derived from w(a) have 3' termini within this insertion, and only small amounts of structurally normal RNA are produced. The activity of w(a) is reduced in trans by a semidominant mutation in the gene Enhancer-of-white-apricot (E(w(a)). Flies that are w(a) and heterozygous for the enhancer have eyes which are much lighter than the orange-yellow of w(a) alone while E(w(a)) homozygotes have white eyes. This semidominant effect on pigmentation is correlated with a corresponding decrease in white RNA having wild type structure, and flies homozygous for E(w(a)) have increased levels of aberrant RNAs. Three revertant alleles of E(w(a)) generated by reversion of the dominant enhancer phenotype with gamma radiation are noncomplementing recessive lethals, with death occurring during the larval stage. The effects on w(a) eye pigmentation of varying doses of the original E(w(a)) allele, the wild type allele, and the revertant alleles suggest that the original E(w(a)) allele produces a product that interferes with the activity of the wild type gene and that the revertants are null alleles. We propose that the E(w(a)) gene product influences the activity of the downstream copia long terminal repeat in 3' end formation.

URLhttp://www.genetics.org/content/126/4/1061