Paramutation: Directed Genetic Change
Abstract
The initial studies revealed that paramutation involved chromosome components that do not conform to the ordinary rules of gene stability and integrity in heterozygotes. Furthermore, the induced heritable changes were directed. R paramutation appeared to be comparable in these respects to certain phenomena reported much earlier in Pisum by Bateson and Pellew (2), in Malva by Lilienfeld (3), and in Oenothera by Renner (4) as anomalous exceptions to Mendelian inheritance. The R case in maize offered advantages for experimental analysis which these other systems lacked, and it has been intensively investigated. The present article is limited to discussion of the R studies, for the most part, but the results appear to be meaningful for paramutation in general.
The biological significance of paramutation rests on the fact that the phenomenon involves constraint on gene expression during development of the individual which is exerted by factors located within the chromosome itself. The illuminating advances made in recent decades in characterizing the genetic substance biochemically have disclosed genomic components...
Full Text:
PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.629-638