Radiation-induced alcohol dehydrogenase mutants in maize following allyl alcohol selection of pollen

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Abstract

The alcohol dehydrogenase-1 gene in maize presents advantages for mutational analysis. Foremost among these is the ability to chemically select ADH-negative and ADH-low gametophytes owing to their resistance to allyl alcohol vapour. Immature tassels were irradiated with either 220 kV X-rays or 400 MeV/amu accelerated neon-ions; spontaneous mutants were also selected and recovered. RBE for neon-20 was about 5. A total of 70 presumptive mutants were placed into one of four classes on the basis of allozyme profiles following electrophoresis and ADH staining: (A) dysfunction, (B) underproducer, (C) overproducer, and (D) up-Adh2 gene. Mutants have been recovered and confirmed in the first three classes. These include two male-transmissible deletion-type lesions induced by X-rays, five underproducer transpositions and one overproducer transposition induced by neon-20. Certain of the neoninduced alleles are unstable in their expression. All 70 mutants are chromosomal aberrations; no intragenic lesions were recovered although our experimental design would have preferentially recovered them if they had occurred. The Discussion considers the mutagenic action of ionizing radiation, and especially the well-documented differences between maize and Drosophila data. In particular, the effect of these chromosome derangements on the ‘programmable’ component(s) of the Adhl cistron is discussed. © 1978, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.

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Freeling, M., & Cheng, D. S. K. (1978). Radiation-induced alcohol dehydrogenase mutants in maize following allyl alcohol selection of pollen. Genetical Research, 31(2), 107–129. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016672300017882

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