| Literature DB >> 8978050 |
C R Preston1, J A Sved, W R Engels.
Abstract
We studied P element-induced recombination in germline mitotic cells by examining the structure of the recombinant chromosomes. We found that most recombinants retain a mobile P element at the site of the recombination, usually with either a deletion or a duplication immediately adjacent to the P end at which the crossover occurred. The sizes of these deletions and duplications ranged from a few base pairs to well over 100 kb. These structures fit the "hybrid element insertion" (HEI) model of male recombination in which the two P-element copies on sister chromatids combine to form a "hybrid element" whose termini insert into a nearby position on the homologue. The data suggest that P-induced recombination can be used as an efficient means of generating flanking deletions in the vicinity of existing P elements. These deletions are easily screened using distant flanking markers, and they can be chosen to extend in a given direction depending on which reciprocal recombinant type is selected. Furthermore, the retention of a mobile P element allows one to extend the deletion or generate additional variability at the site by subsequent rounds of recombination.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8978050 PMCID: PMC1207714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genetics ISSN: 0016-6731 Impact factor: 4.562