Mosaic: A position-effect variegation eye-color mutant in the mosquito Anopheles gambiae

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Abstract

The Mosaic (Mos) mutation, isolated in the F1 of 60Co-irradiated mosquitoes, confers variegated eye color to third and fourth instar larvae, pupae, and adults of the mosquito Anopheles gambiae. Mos is recessive in wild pink eye (p+) individuals, but is dominant and confers areas of wild-type pigment in mutant pink eye backgrounds. Mos is located 14.4 cM from pink eye on the X chromosome and is associated with a duplication of division 2B euchromatin that has been inserted into division 6 heterochromatin. Various combinations of Mos, pink eye alleles, and the autosomal mutation red eye were produced. In all cases, the darker pigmented regions of the eye in Mos individuals show the phenotypic interactions expected if the phenotype of those regions is due to expression of a p+ allele. Expression of Mos is suppressed by rearing larvae at 32 °C relative to 22 °C. All of these characteristics are consistent with Mos being a duplicated wild copy of the pink eye gene undergoing position-effect variegation.

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Benedict, M. Q., McNitt, L. M., Cornel, A. J., & Collins, F. H. (2000). Mosaic: A position-effect variegation eye-color mutant in the mosquito Anopheles gambiae. Journal of Heredity, 91(2), 128–133. https://doi.org/10.1093/jhered/91.2.128

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