Sex in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is normally determined by a genic balance mechanism1, the ratio of X chromosomes to autosomes, so that XX animals are self-fertilizing hermaphrodites and X0 animals are males2,3. However, recessive mutations of the autosomal gene tra-1 III cause both XX and X0 animals to develop into males4, and a linked dominant mutation causes both XX and X0 animals to develop into females 5. Here I show that these two kinds of mutation are allelic, and that stable mutant strains can be constructed in which sex is determined not by X-chromosome dosage but by the presence or absence of a single active gene. In these strains the autosomes carrying the tra-1 locus are in effect homomorphic Z and W sex chromosomes, and the sexes are homogametic ZZ males and heterogametic ZW females, in contrast to the wild-type arrangement of homogametic XX hermaphrodites and heterogametic X0 males. © 1983 Nature Publishing Group.
CITATION STYLE
Hodgkin, J. (1983). Two types of sex determination in a nematode. Nature, 304(5923), 267–268. https://doi.org/10.1038/304267a0
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