Population genetics of Drosophila amylase. II. Geographic patterns in D. pseudoobscura.

Genetics
J R Powell

Abstract

Morph frequencies of three related polymorphisms were determined in ten natural populations of Drosophila pseudoobscura. They are the well-known inversion polymorphism of the third chromosome and the polymorphism for alpha-amylase produced by the structural gene Amy (which resides on the third chromosome). The third polymorphism was for tissue-specific expression of Amy in adult midguts; a total of 13 different patterns of activity have been observed. The preceding paper (Powell and Lichtenfels 1979) reports evidence that the variation in Amy expression is under polygenic control. Here we show that the polymorphism for midgut patterns occurs in natural populations and is not an artifact of laboratory rearing.--From population to population, Amy allele frequencies and frequencies of inversions belonging to different phylads vary coordinately. The geographic variation in alpha-amylase midgut activity patterns is uncorrelated with that for the other two types of polymorphisms. Furthermore, no correlation was detected between activity pattern(s) and Amy genotype(s) when both were assayed in the same individual.--These results imply that whatever the evolutionary-ecological forces are that control frequencies of the structural gene ...Continue Reading

Citations

Oct 19, 2006·Nature Reviews. Genetics·Matthew V Rockman, Leonid Kruglyak
Jul 1, 1981·Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution·Jayne N Ahearn, David T Kuhn
Mar 1, 1980·Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution·Jeffrey R PowellMarko Andjelković
Jan 1, 1987·Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution·Robert D Seager, Wyatt W Anderson
Sep 1, 1980·Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution·Winifred W Doane
Dec 1, 1980·Journal of Molecular Evolution·W J Dickinson
Jun 1, 1987·TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik·C DamervalD de Vienne

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