Worm Breeder's Gazette 8(2): 16

These abstracts should not be cited in bibliographies. Material contained herein should be treated as personal communication and should be cited as such only with the consent of the author.

Hybrid Dysgenesis in Panagrellis

C. Link and W.B. Wood

Arguments that dysgenic elements are 'selfish DNA' which propagate 
in a population by colonizing virgin genomes via sex (1) suggest that 
such elements may be uncommon in self-fertilizing species.  We have 
therefore undertaken to look for dysgenesis and/or dysgenic elements 
in male/female rhabditid species.
We have obtained Panagrellus redivivus strains from R.  Pulak, 
Manitoba (RP strain); P.  Sternberg, MIT (PS strain); and the stock 
center (SC strain).  Matings between these strains reveal a dramatic 
unidirectional effect: the brood size of RP male x PS female is less 
than 1/20th of that seen in the reciprocal cross or in intrastrain 
crosses of either parent.  The 'missing' progeny from the anomalous 
cross appear to result from embryonic lethality, since the gravid PS 
females contain degenerating embryos.  The few progeny which escape 
this lethality are generally healthy and behave like an RP strain in 
subsequent backcrosses.  (The SC strain behaves like RP in these 
crosses.)  Two recessive mutants (1 Unc, 1 Dpy) have been recovered as 
F3's from RP male x PS female crosses; the frequency at which these 
mutants were recovered seems to indicate a mutation frequency higher 
than the spontaneous rate.
These observations differ from Drosophila dysgenesis in that 
lethality is observed in the first generation.  This could be 
accounted for if dysgenic elements are mobile in both somatic and 
germline cells in the embryo.  We are looking for such an element by 
screening a genomic RP clone library with total genomic RP and PS 
DNA's, which should enable us to find clones which contain repetitive 
elements that differ in copy number between these strains.
We would be interested in obtaining other Panagrellus strains or any 
wild male/female C.  elegans-like strain.  In the course of this work 
we have generated a C.  elegans N2 clone bank in lambda EMBL/4, which 
has advantages over lambda1059(2) and may be useful to someone.