
Genetics: Analysis and Principles 4th Edition by Robert Brooker
Edition 4ISBN: 978-0077474904
Genetics: Analysis and Principles 4th Edition by Robert Brooker
Edition 4ISBN: 978-0077474904 Exercise 8
All of the homeotic genes in Drosophila have been cloned. As discussed in Chapter 18, cloned genes can be manipulated in vitro. They can be subjected to cutting and pasting, site-directed mutagenesis, etc. After Drosophila genes have been altered in vitro, they can be inserted into a Drosophila transposon vector (i.e., a P element vector), and then the genetic construct containing the altered gene within a P element can be injected into Drosophila embryos. The P element then transposes into the chromosomes, thereby introducing one or more copies of the altered gene into the Drosophila genome. This method is termed P element transformation.
With these ideas in mind, how would you make a mutant gene with a "gain-of-function" in which the Antp gene would be expressed where the abd-A gene is normally expressed What phenotype would you expect for flies that carried this altered gene
With these ideas in mind, how would you make a mutant gene with a "gain-of-function" in which the Antp gene would be expressed where the abd-A gene is normally expressed What phenotype would you expect for flies that carried this altered gene
Explanation
Many of the eukaryotic genes posses a co...
Genetics: Analysis and Principles 4th Edition by Robert Brooker
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