THE EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE AND PARENTAL AGE ON RECOMBINATION AND NONDISJUNCTION IN CAENORHABDITIS ELEGANS

  • Rose A
  • Baillie D
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Abstract

The effect of temperature and parental age on recombination frequency in C. elegans was studied between pairs of closely linked markers on linkage groups I and V. In the regions studied, recombination frequency vaned three-fold over the temperature range 13.5° to 26°. Temperature-shift experiments indicated that a temperature-sensitive recombination event occurs approximately 50 oocytes prior to fertilization. Recombination frequency was observed to decrease with maternal age. The greatest decrease was observed in the first 24 hours of egg production. The frequency of male progeny, a measure of X-chromosome nondisjunction was also studied. This frequency increased with elevated temperature and age of the parent.

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Rose, A. M., & Baillie, D. L. (1979). THE EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE AND PARENTAL AGE ON RECOMBINATION AND NONDISJUNCTION IN CAENORHABDITIS ELEGANS. Genetics, 92(2), 409–418. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/92.2.409

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