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  • Articles  (84)
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of molecular evolution 24 (1986), S. 83-88 
    ISSN: 1432-1432
    Keywords: Transposons ; Polymorphism ; Drosophila ; Southern technique
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The genomic distributions of the copia, 297, 412, mdg 1, and B 104 transposable elements have been compared by the Southern technique among two Oregon R and four Canton SDrosophila laboratory lines that have been maintained separately for defined periods of a few years. The heterogeneity of the autoradiographic patterns suggests that multiple transposition events have occurred during the time of separation. The hypothesis that transposition could be induced by, variations of environmental parameters is discussed.
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  • 2
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    Development genes and evolution 184 (1978), S. 233-249 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Tissue culture ; Muscles ; Metamorphosis ; Ecdysone ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The differentiation of muscles in primary cultures of cells fromDrosophila melanogaster embryos was investigated. In early cultures, and in the absence of exogenous ecdysone, two main classes of muscle were found. Comparison, by light and electron microscopy, of one of these classes (the “myotube” class) with muscles from third instar larvae shows that this class corresponds to the muscles of the body wall of the larva. When α- or β-ecdysone is added to the cultures, these undergo a number of metamorphic changes. Most of the larval muscles disappear, and two new types of muscle form. Ultrastructural and light microscopic examination of these two types indicates that they correspond to the two classes of skeletal muscle (fibrillar and tubular) found in adult flies.
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  • 3
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    Development genes and evolution 184 (1978), S. 273-283 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Nervous system ; Development ; Imaginal discs ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The pathway of adult sensory nerves has been analysed in three experimental situations: (i) in flies with grossly abnormal thoracic morphology resulting from X-irradiation early during development, (ii) in flies which had been subjected to surgical operations late in the larval period, (iii) in homoeotic mutants. The results provide experimental support for a simple mechanism in which developing adult axons join the nearest larval nerve and are guided by it up to the central nervous system. In particular, experimental interference with normal development can result in nerves from different segments, or from dorsal and ventral appendages, joining each other and entering the central nervous system together.
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  • 4
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 359-377 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Blastoderm fate map ; Head segmentation ; Larval cuticle
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Embryos of Drosophila melanogaster were irradiated in the presumptive head region with a UV-laser microbeam of 20 μm diameter at two developmental stages, the cellular blastoderm and the extended germ band. The ensuing defects were scored in the cuticle pattern of the head of the first-instar larva, which is described in detail in this paper. The defects caused by irradiating germ band embryos when morphologically recognisable lobes appear in the head region were used to establish the segmental origin of various head structures. This information enabled us to translate the spatial distribution of blastoderm defects into a fate map of segment anlagen. The gnathal segments derive from a region of the blastoderm between 60% and 70% egg length (EL) dorsally and 60% and 80% ventrally. The area anterior to the mandibular anlage and posterior to the stomodaeum is occupied by the small anlagen of the intercalary and antennal segments ventrally and dorsally, respectively. The labrum, which originates from a paired anlage dorsally at 90% EL, is separated from the remaining head segments by an area for which we did not observe cuticle defects following blastoderm irradiation, presumably because those cells give rise to the brain. The dorsal and lateral parts of the cephalo-pharyngeal skeleton appear to be the only cuticle derivatives of the non-segmental acron. These structures derive from a dorso-lateral area just behind the putative brain anlage and may overlap the latter. In addition to the segment anlagen, the regions of the presumptive dorsal pouch, anterior lobe and post-oral epithelium, whose morphogenetic movements during head involution result in the characteristic acephalic appearance of the larva, have been projected onto the blastoderm fate map. The results suggest that initially the head of the Drosophila embryo does not differ substantially from the generalised insect head as judged by comparison of fate map and segmental organisation.
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  • 5
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 489-498 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Pole cells and midgut progenitors ; Cell lineages ; Embryogenesis ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary In this paper experiments concerning some aspects of the development of pole cells and midgut progenitors in Drosophila are reported. Cells were labelled by injecting horseradish-peroxidase (HRP) in embryos before pole bud formation and transplanted at different stages into unlabelled embryos, where the transplanted cells developed together with the unlabelled cells of the host. The hosts were then fixed and stained at different ages in order to demonstrate the presence of HRP in the progenies of transplanted cells. The main conlusions of the study are as follows. The gonads are the only organ to the formation of which pole cells normally contribute; those pole cells which do not participate in the formation of the gonads are finally eliminated or degenerate. Since the number of primordial germ cells in the gonads is the same irrespective of the number of pole cells present in the embryo, an (unknown) mechanism must exist regulating the final number of pole cells in each of the gonads. After their formation and before reaching the gonads, pole cells have been found to divide only up to two times. With respect to the midgut progenitors, the cells of both anlagen have been found to be committed to develop into midgut, although they behave as equivalent in that they do not apparently distinguish between the anterior and posterior anlage. Midgut progenitors have been found to divide a maximum of three times and to produce two different types of cells, epithelial cells of the midgut wall and spindle-like cells located internally in the gut.
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  • 6
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    Cellular and molecular life sciences 42 (1986), S. 191-192 
    ISSN: 1420-9071
    Keywords: Drosophila ; enzyme ; sn-glycerol-3-phosphate ; dehydrogenase ; dominance ; trans, regulation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary A regulatory element tightly linked to theGpdh locus inDrosophila melanogaster has been isolated from a natural population. Flies homozygous for second chromosomes bearing the element,H31, have half the GPDH activity of normal homozygotes. Heterozygotes betweenH31 andF orS alleles exhibit dominance in GPDH activity. Heterozygotes betweenH31, F orS andDf(2L) GdhA have half the diploid level. The contribution of theS allele to the activity inS/H31 heterozygotes is more than four times that ofH31. The regulatory element distinguishingH31 is tightly linked to theGpdh + locus.
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  • 7
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    Cellular and molecular life sciences 42 (1986), S. 600-604 
    ISSN: 1420-9071
    Keywords: Drosophila ; temperature-effects ; pupation ; mating ; oviposition ; adaptive strategies
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary A comparison of pupation-temperature range was made in the laboratory on a temperature gradient (3–38°C) using 12 species ofDrosophila representing four species groups and four different ecological backgrounds (temperate-montane forest:virilis group; desert;repleta group; cosmopolitan:melanogaster group; tropical forest:willistoni group). Within groups, differences are found which usually reflect species' distributions. Comparisons of species' mating-, oviposition- and pupation-temperature ranges reveal that pupation most-often occurs at temperatures beyond those for mating and oviposition. Each species reflects a different combination of temperature effects. Individual species have different temperature-limits for mating, oviposition and pupation. Temperatures permissive for one response are not predictive of limits on other responses. Among species, temperature can affect a particular response differently. Within groups, species differences can be at high and/or low temperatures for any response, and temperature effects among closely related species can manifest themselves in one, or any combination of responses. One cannot predict which responses will be most and least limited, or at which end of the temperature scale a response will be most limited. Among groups,common, but notabsolute temperature ranges generally correspond to the geographic distributions and ecological backgrounds of the species triads. The evaluation of temperature effects on species, based on a single activity, may not be adequate for predicting adaptive strategies.
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  • 8
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    Cellular and molecular life sciences 42 (1986), S. 759-769 
    ISSN: 1420-9071
    Keywords: Alpha-fetoproteins ; androgens ; brain ; estrogens ; estrogen antagonists ; estrogen receptors ; genitalia ; gonads ; hypothalamus ; preoptic area ; receptor imprinting ; reproductive tract ; sexual differentiation ; sexually dimorphic nucleus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 9
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    Development genes and evolution 179 (1976), S. 373-392 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Compound Eye ; Development ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The development of the rhabdomeric pattern in the compound eye ofDrosophila has been studied using combined transplantation and electron microscope techniques. In a first series of experiments eye imaginal discs of increasing age were implanted into larvae ready to pupate, thus losing variable amounts of the normal time for development. A sequence of differentiative abilities was found in the metamorphosed test pieces. As far as the photoreceptor cells are concerned, the most prominent steps of this sequence are: ability to form groups with other similar elements, anatomical polarization of microvilli, establishment of the rhabdomeric pattern and formation of an equator line. The stability of determination of the equator line was tested in a second experimental series. Fragment of different topographical origin within the mature eye anlage were brought to metamorphosis by implantation into larvae ready to pupate. It was found that an equator line differentiates only in those pieces which according to the published anlage maps contain the prospective equator region prior to metamorphosis. The mitotic abilities of implanted eye imaginal discs were investigated by means of “in vitro”3H-thymidine pulse-labelling and light microscope autoradiography of the differentiated test pieces. During the third larval stage the eye anlage is traversed by two consecutive mitotic waves, each one of them producing different categories of receptor cells. The first, anterior wave predominantly produces cells oriented toward the poles of the eye within the ommatidia, while the second, posterior wave gives rise to elements exclusively in an equatorial position. The dynamics of this proliferation are discussed in relation to the findings in the implantation experiments. Silver-grain counts support the possibility that at least two successive cell divisions occur in the eye anlage between labeling with tritiated thymidine and beginning of morphological differentiation. The relevance of this finding for the understanding of the concept of acquisition of competence is discussed.
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  • 10
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    Development genes and evolution 184 (1978), S. 155-170 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Developmental restrictions ; Compound eye ; Pattern formation ; Genetic mosaics ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Five regions of the compound eye have been found to be preferential boundaries for clones of labelledMinute + cells, and to act restrictively on the growth of cell clones after a given developmental stage. One of these regions is topographically related to the line of pattern inversion existing at the level of the equator. The results of experiments showing independency of origin of restriction lines and line of pattern inversion are reported.
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  • 11
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 22-32 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Cell lineage ; Malpighian tubules ; Compartments ; Cell death
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Genetically marked maroon-like (mal) clones were induced by mitotic recombination with X-rays at the blastoderm stage in mal/mal + heterozygotes and were analysed in differentiated Malpighian tubules (MT). Marked cells were not confined to single anterior (MA) or posterior (MP) tubules, but were distributed among the four tubules. About 70% of the clones with two or more cells were fragmented, i.e. mal cells were separated by wild-type cells. Since the clones contain, on average, 6 cells and the differentiated MT consist of 484 cells (2 × 136 MA cells, 2 × 106 MP cells), we estimate that there are about 80 cells in the blastoderm anlage which on average pass through two to three mitoses. With increasing radiation doses (254 R, 635 R, 1270 R) a linear increase in clone frequency is observed. The mean sizes and size distributions of clones, however, remain unchanged. Since the increasing radiation dose also results in fewer differentiated Malpighi cells, we assume that regeneration does not occur. Therefore, size distributions of marked clones presumably represent real mitotic patterns in normogenesis. We suggest that essentially three successive mitoses take place, with a decreasing fraction of cells showing mitotic activity. Only a small fraction of cells goes through a fourth or even a fifth mitosis. Marked non-Minute clones induced in Minute heterozygotes are more frequent, but are not larger than non-Minute clones in wild-type background. Therefore, compartment boundaries cannot be recognized by this method. However, frequencies of marked cells found simultaneously in MA and MP pairs or in several single tubules of the same individuals are significantly higher than frequencies of multiple recombination events predicted by the Poisson distribution. From this, we conclude that neither the MA pair nor the MP pair nor single tubules represent compartments of the MT anlage.
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  • 12
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 389-398 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Cell lineage ; Embryogenesis ; Drosophila ; Cell marking ; Cell transplantation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary A method is presented which allows the study of the progeny of single cells during Drosophila embryogenesis. Cells from various larval anlagen of donor embryos labelled with a lineage tracer are individually transplanted from defined positions into similar, or different, positions in unlabelled hosts. The clones produced by these cells can be seen in whole mounts or in sections of fixed material, when using a histochemical marker (i.e. HRP), and/or in living embryos, when using fluorescent lineage tracers. The characteristics of the clones disclose lineage parameters, such as division patterns, morphogenetic movements and differentiation. The method is especially useful for testing the respective roles of positional information and cell lineage on the commitment of progenitor cells by transplanting these cells into heterotopic positions or into hosts of different genotypes.
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  • 13
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 334-337 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Suppression ; P elements ; Lethality ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary In this paper we describe a new allele of suppressor of forked, su(f) hd37, referred to as hd37, which was isolated in a hybrid dysgenesis mutation screen and is shown to be P induced by its high frequency of reversion in hybrid dysgenic crosses, and by in situ hybridization. hd37 suppresses forked and fails to complement the forked suppression of known su(f) alleles. However, it complements the recessive lethality of alleles in both of the su(f) lethal complementation groups. We also describe a new phenotypic effect of su(f) alleles, the enhancement of Minute(3)i 55. Recessive lethal alleles enhance the lethal effects of this Minute, but hd37 does not. The temperature sensitive period for forked bristle suppression by hd37 was found to be very narrow, consisting of a short interval (12–18 h) immediately before bristle formation. These results suggest that the several genetic functions associated with this locus may be genetically separable.
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  • 14
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    Development genes and evolution 179 (1976), S. 349-372 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Insect Development ; Genetic Mosaics ; Fate Maps ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Gynandromorphs with female XX-and male XO-areas result from the loss of an unstable ring-X-chromosome in the early cleavage mitoses of ring/rod-X-chromosome heterozygotes. The phenotypes of the recessive alleles on the rod-X-chromosome are expressed in the XO-areas. 377 larval gynandromorphs of the genotypeR(1)2, In(1)w vC /y w sn3Iz50e mal were examined and scored for the phenotypes of 13 paired and 10 unpaired structures (Table 2, Fig. 2). This was possible mainly by the cell-autonomous expression of aldehyde oxidase activity in soft tissues and by the comparison of the distribution of enzyme activity in wildtype and gynander larvae. The distances between pairs of structures were calculated in sturt-units (Tables 3 and 4). A morphogenetic fate map with the presumptive areas of larval structures was constructed (Fig. 3). The relative positions of the structures agree well with Poulson's fate map (Fig. 4). In addition, the distribution of phenotypes was scored in 380 adult gynandromorphs Table (5). The fate map (Fig. 5) which was constructed from these data is very similar to the fate map of larval structures. This similarity becomes even more pronounced if fate maps are constructed which contain only structures analogous in larva and imago (Table 6, Fig. 6). Therefore an attempt was made to set up an integrated morphogenetic fate map containing the presumptive areas of both larval and imaginal structures (Fig. 7). The possibilities of further blastoderm mapping are discussed.
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  • 15
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    Development genes and evolution 184 (1978), S. 75-82 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Egg shape ; Pole cell transplantation ; Sterility ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Females homozygous for a newly isolated mutation induced by ethyl methane sulphonate,fs(1)K10, lay abnormally shaped eggs in which the dorsal appendages of the chorion are enlarged and fused ventrally. The eggs are usually not fertilized and development is never normal beyond the blastoderm stage. The mutant was mapped to the tip of the X-chromosome with a meiotic position of 1–0.5 and a cytological location between 2B17 and 3A3. Using germ line mosaics constructed by transplantation of pole cells, it was shown that the abnormal morphology and the sterility are obtained only when the germ line is homozygous for the mutant.
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  • 16
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 210-221 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Peripheral nervous system ; Neurogenesis ; Mutants ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Mutations previously known to affect early neurogenesis inDrosophila melanogaster have been found also to affect the development of the peripheral nervous system. Anti-HRP antibody staining has shown that larval epidermal sensilla of homozygous mutant embryos occur in increased numbers, which depend on the allele considered. This increase is apparently due to the development into sensory organs of cells which in the wild-type would have developed as non-sensory epidermis. Thus, neurogenic genes act whenever developing cells have to decide between neurogenic and epidermogenic fates, both in central and peripheral nervous systems. Different regions of the ectodermal germ layer are distinguished with respect to their neurogenic abilities.
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  • 17
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 302-317 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Maternal effect Mutations ; Pattern formation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Mutations in seven different maternal-effect loci on the second chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster all cause alterations in the anterior-posterior pattern of the embryo. Mutations in torso (tor) and trunk (trk) delete the anterior- and posterior-most structures of the embryo. At the same time they shift cellular fates which are normally found in the subterminal regions of the embryo towards the poles. Mutations in vasa (vas), valois (vls), staufen (stau) and tudor (tud) cause two embryonic defects. For one they result in absence of polar plasm, polar granules and pole cells in all eggs produced by mutant females. Secondly, embryos developing inside such eggs show deletions of abdominal segments. In addition, embryos derived from staufen mothers lack anterior head structures, embryos derived from valois mothers frequently fail to cellularize properly. Mutations in exuperantia (exu) cause deletions of anterior head structures, similar to torso, trunk and staufen. However in exu, these head structures are replaced by an inverted posterior end which comprises posterior midgut, proctodeal region, and often malpighian tubules. The effects of all mutations can be traced back to the beginning stages of gastrulation, indicating that the alterations in cellular fates have probably taken place by that time. Analysis of embryos derived from double mutant mothers suggests that these three phenotypic groups of mutants interfere with three different, independent pathways. All three pathways seem to act additively on the system which specifies anterior-posterior cellular fates within the egg.
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  • 18
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 145-157 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Cell polarity ; Limb development ; Pattern formation ; Bristle
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The legs of flies from 16 different mutant strains ofDrosophila melanogaster were examined for abnormal cuticular polarities and extra joints. The strains were chosen for study because they manifest abnormal cuticular polarities in some parts of the body (10 strains) or because they have missing or defective tarsal joints (6 strains). All but three of the stocks were found to exhibit misorientations of either the bristles, hairs, or “bract-socket vectors” on the legs. The latter term denotes an imaginary vector pointing from a hairlike structure called a “bract” to the bristle socket with which it is associated. On the legs of wild-type flies nearly all such vectors point distally, as do the bristles and hairs. In the mutant flies, the most common vector misorientation is a 180° reversal. When the bract-socket vectors of adjacent bristle sites in the same bristle row point toward one another, the distance between the sites is frequently abnormally large, whereas when the vectors point in opposite directions, the interval is frequently abnormally small. This correlation is interpreted to mean that bristle cells actively repel one another via cytoplasmic extensions that are longer in the direction of the bract-socket vector than in the opposite direction. Repulsive forces of this kind may be responsible for “fine-tuning” the regularity of bristle spacing in wild-type flies. Extra tarsal joints were found in eight of the 16 strains. A ninth strain completely lacking tarsal joints appears in some cases to have an extra tibia-basitarsus joint in its tibia. Whereas the tarsi of wild-type flies contain four joints, the tarsi ofspiny legs mutant flies contain as many as eight joints. In this extreme extra-joint phenotype, four of the joints correspond to the normal wild-type joints, and there is an extra joint in every tarsal segment except the distal-most (fifth) segment. Nearly all such ectopic extra joints have inverted polarity. In other strains the extra tarsal joints are located mainly at the wild-type joint sites, and joints of this sort have wild-type polarity. The alternation of normal and inverted (extra) joints inspiny legs resembles the alternation of normal and inverted (extra) body segment boundaries in the embryonic-lethal mutantpatch, suggesting that tarsal and body segmentation may share a common patterning mechanism.
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  • 19
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 222-228 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Sense organs ; Drosophila ; Pattern formation ; Peripheral nervous system
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Various types of sense organs are arranged in a highly reproducible pattern on the thoracic and abdominal segments ofDrosophila embryos and larvae. We describe this pattern and identify the neurons that innervate each sense organ. This identification is confirmed by the analysis of partial deficiencies for the scute region, which delete specifically some of the sense organs and their innervating neurons. Since our description of the sense organs accounts for all the sensory neurons that have been identified in the embryo, we believe that this description is accurate and complete, except in the terminal segment, where some sense organs remain to be identified.
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  • 20
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    Development genes and evolution 185 (1978), S. 249-270 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Gynandromorphs ; Cell lineage ; Sexual dimorphism ; Genital discs
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The embryonic organization of the sexually dimorphic genital disc was studied in genetic mosaics resulting (a) from early loss of a chromosome or (b) from mitotic recombination. (a) Early Loss of a Chromosome. Three types of mosaics were produced — purely female mosaics, purely male mosaics, and gynandromorphs. They show that the genital disc arises from a group of cells in the ventral region of the embryo somewhat larger than that giving rise to a single foreleg (Table 2). Within this group of cells three regions can be distinguished that are present in both sexes: an anterior, a medial, and a posterior one, with distances of only 3–4 sturts between adjacent regions. The anterior region gives rise to the female genitalia, the medial region to the male genitalia, and the posterior region forms the analia of both sexes and the parovaria of the female (Figs. 2 and 3). The relative positions of the three regions were deduced from sturt distances (Tables 1 and 5), and from frequencies of mosaicism (Table 2). (b) Mitotic recombination was induced at the blastoderm stage in order to produce twin spots in the external genitalia and analia of purely male and female flies. Clone sizes indicate that these structures arise from a small number of precursor cells (Table 4). Clones overlapped right and left sides, but no clones were found extending over analia and genitalia. However, within either the analia or the genitalia of each sex, no clonal restrictions could be observed, and the clones comprised structures that were up to 12 sturts apart. A comparison of clone sizes and sturt distances in the foreleg and in the genital disc indicates that equal gynandromorph distances involve equal numbers of cells in different regions on the ellipsoid egg (Fig. 5). The results obtained from all mosaics provide a consistent picture of the embryonic organization of the genital disc. This becomes apparent in the summarized fate maps (Fig. 4), where the map derived from normal gynandromorphs can be produced by a simple superposition of the male and the female maps. The data are also discussed with respect to mechanisms of sexual differentiation in the genital disc.
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  • 21
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    Development genes and evolution 185 (1978), S. 271-292 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Homeotic mutations ; Imaginal disc ; Positional Information ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Mutations of the bithorax complex result in segmental transformations in the thorax and abdomen ofDrosophila. The haltere discs from larvae homozygous forbx 3 orpbx are transformed so that the discs contain cells that will produce wing cuticle as well as cells that produce haltere cuticle. The pattern regulation behavior of these discs has been examined. The fate maps of the two discs were established, and then the regulative behavior of a number of fragments from both types of mutant discs was established by culturing the fragments in vivo prior to metamorphosis. The most important conclusion from this work is that the cells producing, haltere cuticle and wing cuticle within the same disc share the same positional information and that they communicate during pattern regulation.
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  • 22
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    Development genes and evolution 195 (1986), S. 445-454 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Neural and epidermal cell lineages ; Embryogenesis ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Some aspects of neural and epidermal cell lineages during embryogenesis of Drosophila melanogaster were studied by transplanting horseradish-peroxidase-(HRP-) labelled ectodermal cells from young gastrula donors into host embryos of similar ages. Heterotopic transplantations permitted us to assess the degree of commitment already attained by the transplanted cells. The resulting cell clones showed normal characteristics of cytodifferentiation and cell number. The results indicate that epidermal progenitors perform a maximum of three mitoses during embryonic development, whereas neuroblasts may perform more than ten mitoses. Clone size distribution is in both cases scattered, suggesting either a rather irregular mitotic pattern or cell death. As indicated by heterotopic transplantations, the neurogenic ectoderm for the ventral nervous system exhibits different neurogenic abilities in its different regions, decreasing from medial to lateral; we discuss the hypothesis that some medially located cells of the young gastrulating embryo could be committed towards the neural fate before segregating from the ectoderm. On the other hand, the cells of the dorsal ectodermal regions at the same stage seem to be indifferent with respect to commitment, for they are able to give rise to central neural lineages following their transplantation in the neurogenic region.
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  • 23
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    Cellular and molecular life sciences 42 (1986), S. 846-848 
    ISSN: 1420-9071
    Keywords: Drosophila ; bristles ; phenotype ; directional selection ; chaetogen
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The variations of the dorsocentral and scutellar bristle patterns founded in two bidirectionaly selected lines are discussed in terms of the Richelle and Ghysen model. The phenotype obtained through selection for bristle suppression can be accounted for by a decrease in chaetogen production. Extra bristles can be accounted for by an alteration of the response of the cells to positional information.
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  • 24
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    Cellular and molecular life sciences 42 (1986), S. 1029-1031 
    ISSN: 1420-9071
    Keywords: Thermoregulation ; electrolytic lesion ; TRH ; septum ; hypothalamus ; reticular formation
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Anesthesia with a large dose of pentobarbital (55 mg/kg, i.p.) caused a sustained decrease in brain temperature (Tb), which was monitored with a probe placed in the midbrain reticular formation. The administration of TRH to the lateral ventricle antagonized this hypothermia. None of the acute surgeries examined in this paper (adrenal-demedullectomy, septal knife cuts, electrolytic lesions of the hypothalamus and midbrain knife cuts) had any essential effect on this antagonism by TRH. These results suggest that centrally-administered TRH exerts its effect on thermoregulation, at least in part, through brain structure(s) caudal to the midbrain.
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Yeast ; Drosophila ; Host plants ; Communities ; Vectors
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The yeast communities from slime fluxes of three deciduous trees (Prosopis juliflora, Populus fremontii and Quercus emoryi) and the necroses of two cacti (Opuntia phaeacantha and Carnegiea gigantea) were surveyed in the region of Tucson, Arizona. In addition, the yeasts carried by dipterans associated with the fluxes or necroses (Drosophila carbonaria, D. brooksae, D. nigrospiracula, D. mettleri, and Aulacigaster leucopeza) were sampled. The results indicate that each host sampled had a distinct community of yeasts associated with it. The dipterans, which can act as vectors of the yeasts, deposited yeasts from other sources in addition to those found on their associated hosts. It is argued that host plant physiology is relatively more important than the activity of the vector in determining yeast community composition. Furthermore, the average number of yeast species per flux or necrosis is not different from the average number of yeast species per fly. It is hypothesized that the vector may affect the number of species per individual flux or not, and that the number is lower than the rot or necrosis could potentially support.
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  • 26
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: xanthommatin synthesis ; phenoxazinone synthase ; eye pigmentation ; Drosophila
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Particulate fractions from the heads of Drosophila melanogaster catalyze the conversion of o-aminophenols to phenoxazinones. This particulate enzyme is stimulated by Mn2+. It has a number of features which distinguish it clearly from the Mn2+-dependent activity found in the soluble fraction. The particulate enzyme has a characteristic developmental pattern, showing a marked increase in activity at about the time of onset of xanthommatin synthesis. In addition, it is much reduced in activity in a number of xanthommatin-deficient mutants (v, cn, st, cd, and w). We believe that the head particulate enzyme is involved in xanthommatin biosynthesis and that the developmental onset of synthesis of this pigment is brought about by the synthesis or activation of this enzyme.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: Drosophila ; hemolymph proteins ; gene regulation
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Three of the major protein species present in the hemolymph of Drosophila melanogaster larvae just prior to pupation are absent from second instar larvae but accumulate rapidly during the third instar. This article describes the purification and characterization of one of these, larval serum protein (LSP) 2, using an immunological assay. It is a homohexamer of molecular weight about 450,000, with a polypeptide molecular weight of 78,000–83,000. Fast and slow electrophoretic variants of this protein map between the markers vin and gs, at 36–37 on chromosome 3.
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  • 28
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    Biochemical genetics 16 (1978), S. 927-940 
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: trehalase ; Drosophila ; segmental aneuploidy
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Only one molecular form of trehalase (E.C. 3.2.1.28) was detectable in adult Drosophila melanogaster by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing. An examination of duplication- and deletion-bearing aneuploids exhibiting do sage sensitivity indicated that the enzyme is encoded by a gene, Treh +, located between 55B and 55E of the second chromosome. The tissue-specific soluble and particulate forms of trehalase appear to be manifestations of a single protein encoded by a single gene.
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  • 29
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    Biochemical genetics 24 (1986), S. 683-699 
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: Drosophila ; aldox-2 ; molybdoenzymes
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The aldox-2 locus in Drosophila melanogaster has been shown to affect differentially three molybdoenzymes, aldehyde oxidase, pyridoxal oxidase, and xanthine dehydrogenase. These effects are most obvious at times surrounding the pupal-adult boundary, when the normal organism accumulates large amounts of these enzymes in their active form. This locus has been more precisely mapped genetically to 2–82.9±2.1, with complete concordance between the effects of all recombinant chromosomes on all three enzymes. The cytogenetic location has also been determined to be between 52E and 54E8, with the likelihood that it lies within the region 54B1-54E8. The aldox-2 mutant allele has no visible phenotype and is completely recessive for enzyme effects at all stages tested. Segmental duplication of this region, including the aldox-2 + allele, has no apparent effect on the visible phenotype or the enzymatic activity. The mutant aldox-2 allele has no effect on the developmental expression of two unrelated enzymes, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase and NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase. The effects of this locus on aldehyde oxidase, xanthine dehydrogenase, and pyridoxal oxidase suggest that this locus may code for a product involved in the synthesis of the molybdenum cofactor common to these enzymes.
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    Biochemical genetics 14 (1976), S. 1019-1039 
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: sorbitol dehydrogenases ; polyols ; Drosophila ; spermatogenesis
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Experiments utilizing standard techniques of cell fractionation and disc electrophoresis have revealed the presence of three distinctly different enzymes which catalyze the oxidation of d-sorbitol in crude extracts of Drosophila melanogaster adults. These include (1) a soluble NAD-dependent sorbitol dehydrogenase (NAD-SoDHs), (2) a mitochondrial NAD-dependent sorbitol dehydrogenase (NAD-SoDHm), and (3) a soluble NADP-dependent sorbitol dehydrogenase (NADP-SoDH). The structural gene for NAD-SoDHs has been mapped to a locus between 65.3 and 65.6 on the third chromosome by means of an electrophoretic variant and a low-activity allele. Through the use of segmental aneuploidy, this gene has been localized to the region limited by salivary bands 91B–93F. Because mutants which alter either the activity or electrophoretic mobility of the soluble NAD-dependent enzyme have no significant measurable effect on the mitochondrial or NADP-dependent forms, it is suggested that the enzymes in this system are coded for autonomously by different genes.
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  • 31
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: Drosophila ; enzyme activity variation ; α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase ; alcohol dehydrogenase
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The activity levels of alcohol dehydrogenase and α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase were compared among nine species of Drosophila representing three phylogenetic groups. For any given life stage, interspecific variability in activity level was much greater for ADH than for α-GPDH. Patterns of ontogenetic expression of enzyme activity were also much more variable among species for ADH than for α-GPDH. These results are consistent with the interpretation that α-GPDH is involved with a relatively uniform adaptive function among species, whereas ADH levels may reflect variable adaptive capabilities. There is a significant correlation between ADH activities and survivorship on alcohol-treated media for these nine species.
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  • 32
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: pyrimidine biosynthesis ; Drosophila ; rudimentary
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Glutamine-dependent CPSase, ATCase, and DHOase from Drosophila, the first three enzymes in pyrimidine biosynthesis, show coordinate variation in activity throughout development. The three activities were highest in first instar larvae and decreased as development proceeded. The three activities cosediment in sucrose gradients as a single peak with a relative sedimentation coefficient of approximately 30S. CPSase, ATCase, and DHOase copurify during (NH4) 2SO4 fractionation and during DEAE-cellulose and hydroxylapatite chromatography.
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  • 33
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    Biochemical genetics 16 (1978), S. 485-507 
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: sorbitol dehydrogenases ; polyols ; Drosophila ; spermatogenesis
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract It has been shown that crude extracts of Drosophila melanogaster adults contain three distinctly different enzymes which catalyze the oxidation of d-sorbitol into d-fructose. These include (1) a soluble NAD-dependent sorbitol dehydrogenase (NAD-SoDHs), (2) a mitochondrial NAD-dependent sorbitol dehydrogenase (NAD-SoDHm), and (3) a soluble NADP-dependent sorbitol dehydrogenase (NADP-SoDH). Developmental studies have shown that the activities of all three of these enzymes are lowest during the larval stages while highest levels are seen during or shortly prior to the adult period. With respect to NAD-SoDHs, studies of tissue distribution in adults have shown that highest activity is associated with thoracic musculature in both sexes and with organs of the male reproductive system. The developmental profile of this enzyme reveals a significant increase in activity at between 40 and 60 hr after hatching. This time interval corresponds closely to that during which the paternally derived NAD-SoDHs gene is expressed. An additional increase in activity is seen in male pupae at 160 hr and in female adults at 210 hr. The rapid increase in males takes place immediately following the developmental period during which the testes attach to their respective duct systems. NADP-SoDH activity is concentrated among organs of the thorax and abdomen in both sexes. Males show significantly higher levels of this enzyme during the late pupal and early adult periods. In contrast to the patterns of distribution seen for NAD-SoDHs and NADP-SoDH, 91–92% of the total NAD-SoDHm activity in adults is localized to the thoracic musculature. The developmental profile of this enzyme reveals a significant increase in activity during the late pupal and early adult periods, when flight muscle mitochondria are known to be proliferating and undergoing structural maturation.
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    Biochemical genetics 16 (1978), S. 509-523 
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: alcohol dehydrogenase ; enzyme levels ; gene regulation ; Drosophila
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Among the progeny of Drosophila flies heterozygous for two noncomplementing Adh-negative alleles, two individuals were found that had recovered appreciable alcohol dehydrogenase activity, thereby surviving the ethanol medium used as a screen. The most likely explanation is that these Adh-positive flies are the product of intracistronic recombination within the Adh locus. Judging by the distribution of outside markers, one of the crossovers would have been a conventional reciprocal exchange while the other appears to have been an instance of nonreciprocal recombination. The enzymes produced in strains derived from the original survivors can be easily distinguished from wild-type enzymes ADH-S and ADH-F on the basis of their sensitivity to denaturing agents. None of various physical and catalytic properties tested revealed differences between the enzymes of the survivor strains except that in one of them the level of activity is 55–65% of the other. Quantitative immunological determinations of ADH gave estimates of enzyme protein which are proportional to the measured activity levels. These results are interpreted to indicate that different amounts of ADH protein are being accumulated in the two strains.
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  • 35
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    Biochemical genetics 24 (1986), S. 291-308 
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: Drosophila ; aldehyde oxidase ; gene dosage ; Aldox
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Aldox “null” alleles which were isolated from natural populations in Great Britain and North Carolina were analyzed for complementation. No complementation was observed between any combinations of “null” alleles for aldehyde oxidase (AO) specific activity in late third-instar larvae and newly emerged adults. AO immunologically cross-reacting material (AO-CRM) was quantitated in all homozygous stocks at both developmental stages as well as all allelic combinations in newly emerged adults. When the adult organism contains only Aldox n alleles, the polypeptides are not immunologically recognizable or may be rapidly degraded. Larvae and adults have different abilities to degrade mutationally altered enzymatically inactive AO polypeptide or synthesize them differentially. This is indicated by easily measurable AO-CRM levels in late third-instar larvae of Aldox n homozygotes, while newly emerged adult Aldox n homozygotes have very little, if any, AO-CRM. Newly emerged adult heterozygotes of Aldox n /Aldox + do have increased AO-CRM, indicating that the Aldox n alleles can code for a polypeptide which can be “rescued” if Aldox + gene product is present. Heterozygotes containing an Aldox + allele with a deficiency for the Aldox region produce 74.2% of the AO-CRM found in Aldox + homozygotes. This may indicate the presence of trans-acting factors which serve to activate gene expression in a system in which each gene copy is not maximally expressed.
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  • 36
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    Biochemical genetics 24 (1986), S. 873-889 
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: Drosophila ; alcohol dehydrogenase ; temperature ; adaptation ; enzyme polymorphism
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The gene products of the two major alleles of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH-F and ADH-S) have been subjected to kinetic and biochemical analyses over a range of temperatures. Although temperature was found to have a significant effect on both kinetic and biochemical properties ofDrosophila ADH, no significant differential effect was observed between the major ADH allozymes. The results are discussed within the context of the selective maintenance ofAdh polymorphism in natural populations.
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  • 37
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    Biochemical genetics 24 (1986), S. 859-872 
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: Drosophila ; alcohol tolerance ; glycerol-3-phosphate oxidase
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The role of sn-glycerol-3-phosphate oxidase (GPO; EC 1.1.99.5) in the variation of ethanol tolerance inDrosophila melanogaster was assessed in isofemale lines derived from individuals collected at the Chateau Tahbilk Winery and Wandin North Orchard of Victoria, Australia. When fed an undefined medium (semolina-treacle) with 6% ethanol (v/v), larvae of lines with high GPO activities survived better than did larvae of lines with low GPO activities. Although GPO was induced to higher activity levels by dietary ethanol in larvae of all the test lines, GPO activity was greater in lines representing the area outside the wine cellar. This implied that the cellar environment selected against individuals with high levels of GPO. These data do not explain the established difference in tolerance between cellar and outside populations. The GPO activities of lines were not dependent upon the activities of the lipogenic enzyme, glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; the major ethanol-degrading enzyme, alcohol dehydrogenase; or the citric acid cycle enzyme, fumarase. Thus, GPO activity is an important component of the metabolic mechanism of ethanol tolerance in larvae, but the mode of action of GPO has not been defined.
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  • 38
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    Journal of chemical ecology 12 (1986), S. 1037-1055 
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Diptera ; Drosophilidae ; yeasts ; cactus ; community ecology ; mutualism ; coadaptation ; evolution ; alkaloids ; fatty acids ; sterols
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The mutualistic interactions of cactophilicDrosophila and their associated yeasts in the Sonoran Desert are studied as a system which has evolved within the framework of their host cactus stem chemistry. Because theDrosophila-yeast system is saphrophytic, their responses are not thought to directly influence the evolution of the host. Host cactus stem chemistry appears to play an important role in determining where cactophilicDrosophila breed and feed. Several chemicals have been identified as being important. These include sterols and alkaloids of senita as well as fatty acids and sterol diols of agria and organpipe cactus. Cactus chemistry appears to have a limited role in directly determining the distribution of cactus-specific yeasts. Those effects which are known are due to unusual lipids of organpipe cactus and triterpene glycosides of agria and organpipe cactus.Drosophilayeast interactions are viewed as mutualistic and can take the form of (1) benefits to theDrosophila by either direct nutritional gains or by detoxification of harmful chemicals produced during decay of the host stem tissue and (2) benefits to the yeast in the form of increased likelihood of transmission to new habitats. Experiments on yeast-yeast interactions in decaying agria cactus provide evidence that the yeast community is coadapted. This coadaptation among yeasts occurs in two manners: (1) mutualistic increases in growth rates (which are independent of the presence ofDrosophila larvae) and (2) stabilizing competitive interactions when growth reaches carrying capacity. This latter form is dependent on larval activity and results in benefits to the larvae present. In this sense, the coadapted yeast community is probably also coadapted with respect to itsDrosophila vector.
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  • 39
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    Behavior genetics 16 (1986), S. 271-279 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; habitat choice ; learning ; experience
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Microhabitat preferences ofDrosophila pseudoobscura strains were examined in a Waddington maze, with an emphasis on learning how early environment affected adult habitat choice. The genotypes were roughly those expected in a natural population; the environmental variables included light, temperature, and food. It was found that (1) the different genotypes chose habitats differently; (2) early experience affected subsequent habitat choice; and (3) the effect of early experience was complex, as preference for one niche dimension (temperature) was reinforced by experience with the generally preferred value, preference for another niche dimension (light) was weakened by experience with the generally preferred value, and preference for other niche dimensions (food) was generally unaffected by experience. In this study the contribution to the total chi square was about equal from genotype and from environment. The significance of these findings for studies of dispersal and population structure of natural populations is discussed.
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  • 40
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; learning ; memory ; classical conditioning ; mutants
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    Topics: Biology , Psychology
    Notes: Abstract Holliday & Hirsch (this issue) now agree that “Quinnet al. (1974) have demonstrated learning [inDrosophila] with group data, and their inability to identify individual differences (IDs) in performance does not invalidate their conclusion that some individuals in the population must have learned.” However, they consider it important, if not necessary, to show that anindividual fly has learned. In response to Holliday and Hirsch, this paper discusses why it is not necessary to measure learning in individual fruit flies before searching for underlying biochemical mechanisms.
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  • 41
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: Drosophila ; gene action ; esterase ; isozymes
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    Notes: Abstract It is shown that the gene controlling the synthesis of the organ-specific S-esterase of Drosophila virilis ejaculatory bulbs is located on the second chromosome (at approximate position 192.1±map units). The cells of the genital imaginal disks are determined for the synthesis of S-esterase 10–12 hr after the second molt. The organ-specific esterase can be detected after adult emergence only. It is preceded by an increase in RNA content and by enhancement of RNA synthesis in the cells of the ejaculatory bulbs. Interstock differences were found in the level of the activity of S-esterase, which is under the control of the X chromosome, as well as in the time of expression of enzyme activity, which is controlled by the fifth chromosome. It is suggested that the specific phenotypic expression of this enzyme depends on the system of genes with regulatory expression at both the transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels. The genetic control of the synthesis of the S-esterase described is a convenient model for studying mechanisms of gene activity regulation in eukaryotes.
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  • 42
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    Biochemical genetics 16 (1978), S. 757-767 
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: substrate specificity ; alcohol dehydrogenase ; octanol dehydrogenase ; aldehyde oxidase ; Drosophila
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Starch and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were used to ascertain the substrate specificities of alcohol-oxidizing enzymes in 13 Drosophila species. The substrates used were a variety of long- and short-chain aliphatic alcohols, one aromatic alcohol, and benzaldehyde. Only one enzyme (product of a single-gene locus) showed significant NAD+-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase activity with short-chain aliphatic alcohols. The 13 species, belonging to four different Drosophila groups, all showed a similar complement of alcohol-oxidizing enzymes, although differences in electrophoretic mobility and in levels of activity existed from species to species. These findings are relevant to the adaptation of Drosophila to alcohol environments.
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  • 43
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: ethanol ; lipid ; alcohol dehydrogenase ; Drosophila ; nutrition
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    Notes: Abstract At a moderate concentration (2.5%, v/v) dietary ethanol reduced the chain length of total fatty acids (FA) and increased the desaturation of short-chain FA in Drosophila melanogaster larvae with a functional alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH). The changes in length in total FA were postulated to be due to the modulation of the termination specificity of fatty acid synthetase. Because the ethanol-stimulated reduction in the length of unsaturated FA was blocked by linoleic acid, it was thought to reflect the properties of FA 9-desaturase. Although the ethanol-stimulated reduction in chain length of unsaturated FA was also observed in ADH-null larvae, ethanol promoted an increase in the length of total FA of the mutant larvae. Thus, the ethanolstimulated change in FA length was ADH dependent but the ethanol effect on FA desaturation was not. Ethanol also stimulated a decrease in the relative amount of phosphatidylcholine and an increase in phosphatidylethanolamine. Because similar ethanol-induced changes have been found in membrane lipids of other animals, ethanol may alter the properties of membranes in larvae. It is proposed that ethanol tolerance in D. melanogaster may be dependent on genes that specify lipids that are resistant to the detrimental effects of ethanol.
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  • 44
    ISSN: 1573-4927
    Keywords: flight metabolism ; Drosophila ; αGPDH ; Kacser-Burns
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Measurements of wing-beat frequency (WBF) have been used to characterize flight muscle metabolic rate in Drosophila melanogaster during tethered flight. Progeny of crosses between 17 X-chromosome substitution lines and three null-activity stocks have been studied in order to determine the effect on flight metabolism of sharply reduced activity of α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (αGPDH). It was found that flies with an approximate 50% reduction in αGPDH activity have a metabolic rate that is, in most cases, indistinguishable from that of wild-type flies and, in the most extreme cases, reduced by only 4%. These results demonstrate that αGpdh is not a “major gene” for flight metabolism, in the quantitative genetic sense of the term. These results are in agreement with the Kacser and Burns (1973, 1979, 1981) theory of flux, which postulates that the activity of an enzyme embedded in a multienzyme pathway can sometimes vary from wild-type to very low levels (perhaps 5–10% wild type) with no significant effect on flux through the total pathway.
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  • 45
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    Bioscience reports 6 (1986), S. 519-526 
    ISSN: 1573-4935
    Keywords: TRH related peptides ; hypothalamus ; rat ; radioimmunoassay ; processing
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    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract An antibody was raised to the synthetic pentapeptide pGluHisProGlyLys which, in radioimmunoassay (RIA), could detect the pentapeptide at a level of 10 fmole per tube and exhibited 〈0.5 per cent cross reactivity with a series of related peptides. The RIA was used to demonstrate the presence of C-terminally extended forms of thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) in rat hypothalamus. After extraction, the endogenous peptides were resolved by gel exclusion chromatography and TRH-extended peptides were revealed by trypsin digestion to release the pentapeptide. The TRH extended peptides occurred in substantial quantity, approximately 11 pmoles/g, indicating that only partial processing of the gene duplicated prohormone takes place.
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  • 46
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Heat shock ; Polymorphism ; Transcript mapping ; Deletion
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary We have continued the transcriptional analysis of the region of cytological locus 67B that contains the four small heat shock genes and other genes. Transcription from one of the heat shock genes in the region, hsp 26, takes place during high temperature treatment and at certain developmental stages, without heat shock, in several tissues, such as imaginal discs and adult ovaries. Observations of unexpected products after nuclease protection experiments periments provided the first indication of what genomic blot experiments showed to be small deletions. The alleles containing the deletion are expressed at the same level as the wild type allele. The deletion shortens the protein product, implying that it is in the coding region. Furthermore, flies homozygous for one of the deletion alleles are viable.
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  • 47
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    Molecular genetics and genomics 205 (1986), S. 557-560 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Secretion mutant ; Sequence analysis ; Yolk protein
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The female-sterile mutants fs(1) 1163 of Drosophila melanogaster described by Gans et al. (1975) has been characterised as a yolk protein 1 (YP1) secretion mutant (Bownes and Hames 1978b; Bownes and Hodson 1980). We have cloned and sequenced the YP1 gene from this strain, and the strain in which the mutant was induced. One amino acid substitution was found in the predicted polypeptide sequence, an isoleucine to asparagine change at position 92. The sequence of the leader peptide was identical to previously published YP1 sequences. The possible effects of the amino acid change were investigated by computer analysis, which suggests there is no major alteration of secondary structure, but that a hydrophobic region in YP1 is lost in the mutant. This may affect higher order structure.
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 101 (1986), S. 240-243 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: reparative changes ; food deprivation ; hypothalamus ; ultrastructure of the neuron
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 101 (1986), S. 525-528 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: hypothalamus ; sexual differentiation ; receptors ; sex hormones ; aromatization
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 101 (1986), S. 614-616 
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    Keywords: β-endorphin ; dopamine ; noradrenalin ; adrenalin ; hypothalamus ; cerebral cortex
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    Keywords: protein synthesis ; age ; hypothalamus
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  • 52
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    Keywords: monoamines ; hypothalamus ; paraventricular nucleus ; neurosecretory cells ; chronic alcoholization
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  • 53
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    Keywords: immunogenesis ; thymus ; pineal gland ; hypothalamus
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    Notes: Abstract The effect of acetic acid extracts of the bovine thymus and pineal glands and hypothalamus, purified by gel filtration, on the content of circulating antibodies and the number of antibody-forming cells was investigated in experiments on mice. Extracts of the thymus and pineal glands, injected for 10 days, stimulated immunogenesis induced by injection of sheep's red cells, whereas the hypothalamic extract had an inhibitory action.
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  • 54
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 81 (1976), S. 295-298 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: interoceptive impulses ; emotional behavior ; hypothalamus ; limbic system
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    Notes: Abstract Chronic experiments on rabbits with a gastric fistula and electrodes implanted into deep brain structures showed that stimulation of the gastric receptors leads to modulation of emotional and behavioral responses evoked by electrical stimulation of the hypothalamus, amygdala, and hippocampus. The effect depends on the intensity of interoceptive stimulation and on nature of the emotional response, which has its own cerebral control systems.
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  • 55
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 81 (1976), S. 744-745 
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    Keywords: rat fetuses ; hypothalamus ; adrenals ; corticosterone
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    Notes: Abstract The functional state of the pituitary-adrenal system was studied after removal of the hypothalamus from rat fetuses (encephalectomy in utero). Hormonal activity of the adrenal glands was estimated by fluorometric determination of their corticosterone content. Removal of the hypothalamus in fetuses aged 18.5–19.5 days lowered the adrenal corticosterone level. Injection of a homogenate of the hypothalamus into the fetuses immediately after encephalectomy prevented this decrease. The results confirm the presence of a functional link between the hypothalamus and the pituitary-adrenal system in rat fetuses.
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  • 56
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 81 (1976), S. 659-662 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: blood pressure ; hypothalamus ; monoamine oxidase inhibitor vetrazin
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    Notes: Abstract Changes in cortical and subcortical electrical activity during hypo- and hypertensive vascular responses to electrical stimulation of the hypothalamus were investigated before and after injection of the monoamine oxidase inhibitor vetrazin, in experiments on rabbits anesthetized with urethane. Vetrazin completely blocked the hypertensive response and its electroencephalographic manifestation but had no effect on hypotensive hypothalamic responses. The results are interpreted from the standpoint of differences in the neurochemical mechanisms of hypothalamic pressor and depressor responses.
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  • 57
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 82 (1976), S. 970-972 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: corticosterone ; shock ; hypothalamus
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    Notes: Abstract The 11-hydroxycorticosteroid (11-HCS) concentration was determined in the blood plasma of rats undergoing a mock operation, and rats with an intact, extirpated, or deafferented medio-basal hypothalamus (MBH), during traumatic shock. No significant differences were found in the basal 11-HCS level in the rats of the different groups. Removal of MBH led to a decrease in weight of the adrenal and pituitary glands, whereas deafferentation of MBH led to an increase in weight of the adrenals. The 11-HCS level in rats with complete deafferentation of MBH was significantly higher than in the animals undergoing the mock operation when both were in a state of traumatic shock.
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  • 58
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 82 (1976), S. 955-956 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: serotonin ; hypothalamus ; pituitary thyrotropic function
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    Notes: Abstract The serotonin concentration in the hypothalamus was determined in sexually mature male rabbits during changes in pituitary thyrotropic function. No clear parallel was observed between the intensity of the pituitary thyrotropic function and the hypothalamic serotonin concentration. Stimulation of pituitary thyrotropic function by injection of 6-methylthiouracil or by partial thyroidectomy was accompanied by an increase in the serotonin concentration, whereas during aseptic inflammation in the thyroid gland or after a combination of removal of the superior cervical sympathetic ganglia and administration of chlorpromazine, the increase in thyrotropic function occurred without any significant changes in the hypothalamic serotonin concentration.
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  • 59
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 82 (1976), S. 1020-1022 
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    Keywords: tropane derivatives ; hypothalamus ; synaptic vesicles ; noradrenalin
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    Notes: Abstract The effect of some tropane derivatives on the uptake of exogenous noradrenlin was studied in experiments on isolated hypothalamic synaptic vesicles. LK-11, in a concentration of 1·10−5 M, like cocaine, inhibits the passive uptake of noradrenalin. This effect was shown to depend on the concentration of mediator in the incubation medium.
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  • 60
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 82 (1976), S. 1138-1142 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: Reticular formation ; hypothalamus ; thyroxine ; thyroid function
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    Notes: Abstract The role of the posterior hypothalamic nucleus in the transmission of mesencephalic reticular influences on thyroid hormone secretion was studied. In response to stimulation of the mesencephalic reticular formation in anesthetized cats the concentration of iodine bound with plasma proteins was increased. After bilateral coagulation of the posterior hypothalamic nucleus this effect disappeared. The results confirm the hypothesis of the leading role of the posterior hypothalamic nucleus in stimulation of thyroid hormone secretion.
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  • 61
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 82 (1976), S. 1393-1395 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: neonatal androgenization ; anovulatory sterility ; hypothalamus ; pituitary ; biogenic monoamines
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    Notes: Abstract Injection of testosterone propionate into female Wistar rats on the 2nd–4th day after birth did not change the serotonin concentration but sharply reduced the noradrenalin and dopamine conconcentrations in the hypothalamus of the animals at the age of 3.5 months. This was accompanied by an increase in the prolactin content in the adenohypophysis despite preservation of normal somatotropic activity. The results of this investigation point to a role of catecholamines in the pathogenesis of anovulatory sterility and give greater precision to modern views on the regulation of pituitary gonadotropic function.
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  • 62
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    Keywords: hypothalamus ; coronary arteries ; electrical stimulation ; lipid metabolism ; atherosclerosis
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    Notes: Abstract Electrical stimulation of the supraoptic region of the hypothalamus for 3 weeks in rabbits kept for 3–8 weeks on an atherogenic diet accelerates and intensifies the development of hypercholesteremia and lipoidosis of the coronary arteries and also the metabolic disturbances in the myocardial tissue. These last disturbances are expressed as a fall in the tissue noradrenalin and creatine phosphate concentration and an increase in the inorganic phosphorus and lactic acid concentration.
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  • 63
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 85 (1978), S. 704-707 
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    Keywords: hypothalamus ; corticosteroids ; cholinergic and adrenergic systems
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    Notes: Abstract In experiments on male rats the activity of the pituitary-adrenal system was studied after electrolytic destruction of different parts of the hypothalamus. Pharmacological analysis demonstrated the irregular distribution of cholinergic and adrenergic systems controlling the secretion of ACTH and glucocorticoids in the hypothalamus. It is suggested that the cholinergic systems are located in the mammillary region, α-adrenergic systems in the region of the anterior or posterior hypothalamus, and β-adrenergic receptors in the region of the ventromedial nuclei of the hypothalamus. The latter perhaps play an inhibitory role.
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  • 64
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 86 (1978), S. 1503-1506 
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    Keywords: hypothalamus ; sexual differentiation of the brain ; neonatal castration
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    Notes: Abstract Changes in the protein content in neurons of the anterior and mediobasal hypothalamus of neonatally castrated sexually mature rats were demonstrated by an interferometric method. A considerable increase in the dry weight of the neurons was found in the medial preoptic region and the arcuate and ventromedial nuclei of the hypothalamus. The clearest changes were observed in the nuclei of these neurons. The results point to an influence of androgens in the period of sexual differentiation of the brain on hypothalamic structures responsible for the regulation of both the cyclic and the tonic secretion of gonadotropic hormones in sexually mature animals.
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  • 65
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 82 (1976), S. 1815-1816 
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    Keywords: adrenoblockers ; pyrroxan ; distribution ; hypothalamus
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    Notes: Abstract The distribution of the adrenoblocking drug pyrroxan in the blood plasma and organs of albino rats was investigated. Pyrroxan was shown to appear rapidly in the brain, liver, kidneys, and other organs and to accumulate selectively in the hypothalamus. The use of a spectrofluorometric method showed that unchanged pyrroxan molecules disappear from the plasma and organs in the course of 2 h. In studies with pyrroxan-14C, radioactivity was detected in the organs for 24 h, but in the plasma for several days, indicating the formation of metabolites of pyrroxan or its complexes with plasma proteins and with structural elements of the organs. The high effectiveness of pyrroxan in different forms of hypothalamic disturbances accompanied by symptoms of overexcitation of the sympathetic nervous system can be explained by its selective accumulation in the hypothalamus.
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  • 66
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 85 (1978), S. 81-85 
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    Keywords: adenohypophysis ; hypothalamus ; physicochemical characteristics ; receptor system
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    Notes: Abstract The presence of a specific estradiol-receptor system (E2-R) with limited capacity and with a high degree of strength of formation of the E2-R complex was demonstrated in the cytosol of the adenohypophysis, and anterior hypothalamus of guinea pigs in experiments in vivo and in vitro. The physicochemical properties of the E2-R system of the adenohypophysis and anterior hypothalamus differ in certain parameters. The E2-R complexes of the cytosols of the adenohypophysis and anterior hypothalamus formed at different temperatures are not identical.
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 85 (1978), S. 183-185 
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    Keywords: hypothalamus ; thalamus ; antibody-forming cells ; antibodies
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    Notes: Abstract The number of plaque-forming cells (PFC) in the spleen of rats immunized with sheep's red blood cells (SRBC) after injury to the anterior or posterior part of the medial hypothalamus and also of the thalamus did not differ significantly from the number of PFC in the spleen of intact animals. The titers of hemolyzing and hemagglutinating antibodies in the animals with injuries to the midbrain were a little lower than in intact rats. The decrease in the quantity of circulating antibodies was not connected with the location of the foci of injury but was evidently a consequence of the craniocerebral trauma.
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  • 68
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    Neuroscience and behavioral physiology 16 (1986), S. 305-313 
    ISSN: 1573-899X
    Keywords: hypothalamus ; immunological homeostasis ; DC potential ; evoked potential
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    Notes: Abstract In the course of long-term experiments on rabbits, functional dynamics of subcortical structures were studied by recording background (DC) and evoked potentials (EP) during immune responses elicited to various antigens. During the first day of the immune response process to the different antigens, changes in hypothalamus functioning were similar and occurred with a latency of 9 to 31 min. Inductive and productive primary immune responses were accompanied by successive phasic changes in the functioning of a number of subcortical structures.
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    Behavior genetics 16 (1986), S. 307-317 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: assortative mating ; sexual selection ; inbreeding ; polymorphism ; Drosophila
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    Notes: Abstract The hypothesis that negative assortative mating occurs as a mechanism limiting inbreeding between genetically related individuals ofDrosophila melanogaster was tested. In order to avoid bias linked to using inbred lines, experiments made use of the F1 hybrid progeny between lines rendered homozygous on chromosomes 1, 2, and 3. No negative assortative mating was found, but significant additive variation was observed between lines for orientation, vibration, copulation latencies, and copulation duration. There was no consistency of results, either among parameters or between sexes from the same line. It is therefore unlikely that the variations observed are due merely to quantitative differences in “vigor”. Since all lines originated from the same wild population, these differences are a possible estimate of natural variation in sexual behavior.
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    Behavior genetics 16 (1986), S. 407-413 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; pupation height ; larval behavior ; light
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    Notes: Abstract A comparison of pupation height in light and dark was made using 12 species ofDrosophila, representing four species groups and four different ecological backgrounds (temperate-montane forest,virilis group desert,replate group; cosmopolitanmelanogaster group; tropical forest,willistoni group). Light condition has a significant effect on pupation height in only two of the species. In the light,D. montana stays close to the food surface, whileD. melanogaster pupates higher in light than in dark. Light-dependent patterns of pupation response do not correspond to those previously reported for the light-dependent mating response. Considerable interspecific variation exists for pupation height in each species triad, some of which could provide a basis for larval niche separation. Patterns of species differences in the desertrepleta triad are the same in light and in darkness.
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    Molecular genetics and genomics 204 (1986), S. 302-309 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Yolk polypeptides ; Yolk protein genes ; Evolution ; In situ hybridisation
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The yolk proteins stored in Drosophila, oocytes for utilisation during embryogenesis are an ideal system for studying the regulation of gene expression during development. The 3 major polypeptides found in yolk in D. melanogaster are synthesised in the fat body and ovarian follicle cells and selectively accumulated by the oocyte during vitellogenesis. In order to understand more about their regulation and the mechanism of uptake, studies on other species are necessary. Three yolk polypeptides have previously been identified in the D. melanogaster sibling species (D. melanogaster, D. simulans, D. mauritiana, D. erecta, D. teissieri, D. orena and D. yakuba). In D. melanogaster three genes located on the X chromosome are known to code for these yolk polypeptides. in this study genomic Southern transfers and in situ hybridisation experiments were carried out on the sibling species. Using the three cloned yolk protein genes from D. melanogaster, homologous sequences could be detected in the sibling species. It is suggested that three yolk protein genes occur in each of these species, all being located on the X chromosome, and that two of the genes are very closely linked in these same species. Yolk protein gene-homologous DNA sequences have also been identified in two more distantly related species D. funebris and D. virilis.
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    Molecular genetics and genomics 205 (1986), S. 483-486 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Drosophila ; wingless ; Autonomy
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    Notes: Summary T(Y;2) translocations were used to cytologically localise the wingless locus of Drosophila melanogaster. We found that an existing T(Y;2), which is an insertion of a segment of 2L into the Y chromosome, has wg + within this insert. This Y chromosome was used to generate an attached XY chromosome containing wg +. The mutation claret-nondisjunctional (ca nd) was used to induce the loss of this XY chromosome and thus generate gynandromorphs with wg 1/wg 1 male tissue and wg +/wg 1/wg 1 female tissue. Analysis of these gynanders demonstrated that a genotypically wingless mutant hemithorax is usually also phenotypically mutant in these half body mosaics; thus wg 1 is discautonomous. This observation is of interest as it is known that wg is not cell autonomous.
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    Molecular genetics and genomics 205 (1986), S. 213-216 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Drosophila ; Follicle cell ; Protein ; Female sterile ; Mutation
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary In order to correlate the synthesis of a previously described set of follicel cell (Fc) proteins with a known mutation that affects female fertility, three female sterile mutations, fs(1)384, fs(1)508 and fs(1)1501, mapping in the same region as the Fc locus (7C1-9), were analysed with respect to Fc synthesis. The fs(1)508 strain displayed a normal Fc protein pattern, while in fs(1)384 no Fc protein synthesis could be detected. The fs(1)1501 pattern of Fc polypeptide synthesis was totally different from that of any previously analysed strain, displaying a set of proteins that were much larger than the standard Fc variant form. Two of the female sterile mutations, fs(1)384 and fs(1)1501, were combined in rans with two wild-type strains displaying two different electrophoretic variant forms of the Fc proteins. The combinations were then analysed for Fc protein synthesis, using the fact that females heterozygous for two of the Fc variant forms display both parental forms. The results indicate that the fs(1)384 mutation is directly involved in the synthesis of the Fc proteins, as the trans heterozygotes only synthesize the Fc form derived from the wild-type parent. We also suggest that the large proteins synthesized by the fs(1)1501 mutant are a defective Fc variant form. The nature of the two mutations is also discussed.
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  • 74
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    Keywords: Drosophila ; geotaxis ; selection ; heritability ; correlated responses
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    Notes: Abstract Selection for geotaxis was carried out with flies from a natural population ofDrosophila melanogaster; geotactic behavior was measured by means of a Hirsch classification maze. The population was initially almost neutral to gravity, and it responded to both positive (downward) and negative (upward) selection with a realized heritability of about 0.13. Stabilizing selection toward neutral gravity was carried out simultaneously. At generations 6, 9, and 10, all possible hybrid crosses between pairs of the selected populations were generated and tested. The geotactic scores of hybrids in generations 6 and 9 were not significantly different from the midparent values, while the scores of hybrids in generation 10 deviated significantly from the midparent values in the direction of positive geotaxis. The frequencies of polymorphic inversions declined in every population during selection, but the population under neutral selection seemed to maintain a higher chromosomal polymorphism than those under positive or negative selection. There was no significant depression of productivity, measured as number of progeny, in any population during nine generations of selection.
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    Behavior genetics 6 (1976), S. 141-143 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: Drosophila ; yellow mutant ; receptivity ; chromosome substitution ; backcrossing
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    Notes: Abstract Yellow mutant females ofDrosophila melanogaster are more receptive to yellow males than are wild-type females. By chromosomal substitution, this enhanced receptivity has been localized to the X chromosome. repeated backcrossing between a yellow and a wild-type inbred line, with the yellow locus maintained segregating, allows the conclusion that the yellow locus itself is responsible for the enhanced female receptivity.
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    Behavior genetics 8 (1978), S. 511-526 
    ISSN: 1573-3297
    Keywords: habitats ; evolutionary strategies ; Drosophila ; physical environments ; lek behavior ; alcohol
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    Notes: Abstract There is an association among resource utilization divergence, habitat selection, and taxonomic divergence in the genusDrosophila. Given permissive conditions of temperature, humidity, and light intensity, an enormous variety of resources is used in a diversity of habitats. These resources are considered in the cosmopolitan and endemic Australian fauna, providing evidence for habitat selection in the laboratory and field. Lek behavior in picture-winged species of subgenusHirtodrosophila, a case of parallel evolution with lek behavior in subgenusDrosophila in Hawaii, is discussed in detail. Other examples of habitat selection discussed concern behavioral reactions of larvae to alcohol and other metabolites and the avoidance by adults of extreme physical environments. Evolutionary strategies involved in habitat selection are considered at various taxonomic levels inDrosophila. These considerations show that it is essential to relate results from laboratory studies to natural environments in order to explore the genetics of habitat selection.
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    Cell & tissue research 186 (1978), S. 413-422 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Oogenesis ; Drosophila ; Intercellular bridges ; Synchronous development
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Intercellular bridges have been detected in ovarian follicle cells of Drosophila melanogaster. These bridges occur widely between follicle cells of previtellogenic chambers, while, in vitellogenic chambers, they become restricted to the columnar follicle cells. Usually, only one bridge is detectable between adjacent follicle cells, but a single cell may form two cytoplasmic continuities. The fine structure of the intercellular bridges is similar to that previously described in the development of Drosophila. The bridge wall consists of two layers of which the more external is more electron dense and thinner than the inner one. The role played by the intercellular bridges in the determination of a synchronous differentiation of the linked follicle cells is discussed in relation to the known behaviour of these cells in the secretion of the egg covering precursors.
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 85 (1978), S. 209-211 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: hypothalamus ; anovulatory cycle ; arcuate nucleus ; suprachiasmatic nucleus
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    Notes: Abstract Dependence of the sterilizing action of androgens on the level of differentiation of the hypothalamic centers in the postnatal period of development was studied in female rats. Asynchronous development of the arcuate nucleus (AN; the tonic center) and the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN; the cyclic center) was found. Neurons of AN begin to produce granules of secretion in 20-day embryos. The first neurons with granules of secretion are found in SCN in rats aged 5–7 days. Injection of testosterone propionate induces an anovulatory cycle in females during the first 7 days after birth, on account of inhibition of development of the hypothalamic cyclic center.
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 85 (1978), S. 418-421 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: hypothalamus ; limbico-reticular structures ; evoked potentials
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    Notes: Abstract The order of appearance of evoked potentials in different parts of the septum, amygdala, and reticular formation in response to gradually increasing stimulation of the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus was studied. Excitation arising primarily in the ventromedial nuclei of the hypothalamus was shown to spread initially to structures of the septum and rostral reticular formation, and only later to the more caudal regions of the reticular formation and amygdala.
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 86 (1978), S. 1043-1045 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: adaptation ; cooling ; hypothalamus ; neuron and neuroglia ; acid proteins
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    Notes: Abstract The content of acid proteins in nuclei of neurons and glial satellite cells in the medial preoptic region and supraoptic nucleus of the rat hypothalamus was studied by two-wave cytospectrophotometry on the 1st, 3rd, 7th, and 15th days of adaptation of the animal to cold (temperature 2–4°C). Cooling led to an initial decrease in the content of nuclear proteins in the whole neuronal-neuroglial system of the medial preoptic region, followed by gradual restoration to normal by the 15th day of cooling. In the glial cells of this region, before the return to normal there was a temporary increase in the content of acid proteins above the control level. In the neuronal-neuroglial system of the supraoptic nucleus a gradual accumulation of acid proteins was followed by a return to the control level. By the 15th day of the rats' stay in the cold, the content of neuronal and glial acid proteins of this nucleus fell somewhat below the control level.
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 86 (1978), S. 1090-1092 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: aging ; hypothalamus ; estradiol ; reproductive function
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    Notes: Abstract To study the sensitivity of the hypothalamic sex center to the inhibitory action of estrogens, estradiol-17β was injected into the third ventricle of hemicastrated rats. The dose of estrogen needed to inhibit compensatory hypertrophy of the ovary by 50 and 100% in old animals (14–16 months) was 4 to 5 times greater than in young rats (3 months). The results point to an age increase in the threshold of sensitivity of the tonic region of the hypothalamic sex center to inhibition by estrogens and they can be used to explain the mechanisms of the age increase in gonadotropin secretion and the termination of reproductive function.
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    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 86 (1978), S. 981-984 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: hypothalamus ; pituitary ; deiodinating power ; thyroxine ; aging
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Age differences in interaction between the hypothalamic-hypophyseal system and the thyroid gland were studied with consideration to both direct and feedback control. In old age significant disturbances affect both direct and feedback components of this system; the sensitivity of thyroid tissue to TSH and of the hypothalamus and pituitary to the action of T4 is increased. The increased sensitivity of the hypothalamic-hypophyseal system to T4 is largely determined by activation of the deiodination of T4 by the adenohypophysis. The reactivity of the thyroid gland and hypothalamic-hypophyseal complex to the corresponding factors is reduced.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 83
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Bulletin of experimental biology and medicine 86 (1978), S. 1666-1668 
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: hypothalamus ; enzymes ; hydration ; dehydration
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Histochemical methods were used to study the activity of oxidoreductases and enzymes inactivating mediators in the neurosecretory cells of the anterior hypothalamus during hydration and dehydration in rabbits. Enzymes of the Krebs cycle and of the electron transport system were shown to respond by increased activity to dehydration and by reduced activity to hydration. Activity of α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was increased compared with the control in both cases. Monoamine oxidase activity was reduced during dehydration but increased during hydration; changes in acetylcholinesterase activity were in the opposite direction.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 84
    ISSN: 1573-8221
    Keywords: 1,2-dimethylhydrazine ; biogenic amines ; hypothalamus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Subcutaneous injection of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH) in a dose of 21 mg/kg into male rats is followed after 24 h by a substantial fall in the hypothalamic levels of noradrenalin (NA), dopamine (DA), serotonin (5-HT), and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA). During the first 3–12 h after injection of DMH the NA level was lowered and the intensity of 5-HT metabolism increased in the hypothalamus. The hypothalamic histamine level rose only 30 min after injection of the carcinogen. No significant change took place in the biogenic amine levels in the brain stem and cerebral hemispheres under the influence of DMH. It is suggested that an essential link in the mechanism of the carcinogenic action of DMH in rats is the hormonal metabolic disturbances caused by the selective action of DMH at the level of the hypothalamic biogenic amines.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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