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Phenotypic plasticity of abdominal pigmentation in Drosophila kikkawai: multiple interactions between a major gene, sex, abdomen segment and growth temperature

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Abstract

Drosophila kikkawai is known to be polymorphic for a single autosomal locus controlling abdomen pigmentation in females. Two strains homozygous at this locus (Abdomen pigmentation, Abp) were established from a polymorphic Indian population: one was homozygous (DD) for the dark allele, the other (LL) for the light allele. A Mendelian analysis of crosses at 25°C confirmed the occurrence of a major locus, with dominance of the D allele. Phenotypic variation of pigmentation according to growth temperature was then analyzed in DD and LL male and female flies, and in reciprocal F1. A slight difference was found between reciprocal F1 females from a dark mother were darker but not at all temperatures. In females, the D allele exhibited an antero‐posterior gradient of increasing expression from segment 27, with dominance over L and an increased expression at low temperatures. In males, abdomen pigmentation was uniformly light in segments 25, the D allele being repressed by the sex genotype. In segment 6, the D allele was expressed but only at low temperatures, and was either recessive to L or codominant. Phenotypic plasticity that is, amount of change induced by different growth temperatures, was variable according to genotype and segment. It always corresponded to a darkening of the fly at lower temperatures, but was generally much less than in D. melanogaster. In D. kikkawai, climatic adaptation might occur more by changing the frequency of the D allele than by phenotypic plasticity.

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Gibert, P., Moreteau, B. & David, J.R. Phenotypic plasticity of abdominal pigmentation in Drosophila kikkawai: multiple interactions between a major gene, sex, abdomen segment and growth temperature. Genetica 105, 165–176 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1003704315194

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