Molecular analysis of the Methoprene-tolerant gene region of Drosophila melanogaster.
Adult functions of juvenile hormone ( JH) have been described for Drosophila melanogaster and other dipteran insects, but preadult function for this hormone remains largely unknown in this order of insects. We have identified a mutation of Drosophila, Methoprene-tolerant (Met), which appears to alter JH reception during late larval development. The molecular cloning of Met will be a step toward understanding this gene and possibly identifying a preadult role(s) for JH. Molecular cloning was initiated using the technique of transposon-tagging with a transposable P element. P-element insertional alleles of Met were generated, and genomic libraries were constructed from two of these alleles. From these libraries P-element-bearing clones were isolated that in situ hybridized to the cytogenetic region where Met had been previously localized by genetic methods. Two of the alleles were shown to have complete P-elements inserted in similar, but not identical, locations in the predicted cytogenetic region where Met is located. A late-larval cDNA library was screened to identify transcriptional units in this region, and clones were recovered with homology to a DNA fragment abutting the P-element insertion site. These clones may represent Met cDNA molecules.[1]References
- Molecular analysis of the Methoprene-tolerant gene region of Drosophila melanogaster. Turner, C., Wilson, T.G. Arch. Insect Biochem. Physiol. (1995) [Pubmed]
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