Abstract
Most Mutator lines of maize harbor several different classes of Mu transposons, each of which may be present in high copy number. The regulatory element is also often found in high copy number, and it is this element's behavior that is presumed to cause the non-Mendelian inheritance of Mutator activity. Using a very simple Mutator line, we demonstrate that MuDR-1, a regulator of the Mutator system, can functionally replace standard non-Mendelian Mutator activity and that MuDR-1 is associated with the loss of methylation of the termini of another Mu transposon. Further, we show that Mu transposons can transpose duplicatively, that reinsertion tends to be into unlinked sites, and that MuDR-1 frequently suffers deletions. Changes in chromosomal position and the mode of sexual transmission are shown to be associated with changes in the frequency of MuDR-1 duplication and with the activity of MuDR-1 as monitored by the excision frequency of a reporter transposon of the Mu family, Mu1. Our data are derived from a Minimal Mutator Line in which there are relatively few Mu transposons, including one MuDR-1 regulator and as few as one Mu1 reporter. The seemingly enigmatic results that have been obtained using more complicated Mu genotypes are reinterpreted using simple Mendelian principles. We have borrowed a gap-repair model from Drosophila biologists to explain both duplications and deletions of MuDR-1.
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