FB2024_03 , released June 25, 2024
Reference Report
Open Close
Reference
Citation
Hochman, B. (1997.7.29). Chromosome 4 lethals. 
FlyBase ID
FBrf0094967
Publication Type
Personal communication to FlyBase
Abstract
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Text of Personal Communication
From bhochman@XXXX Mon Jul 28  18:40:44  1997
Envelope-to: rd120@XXXX
Delivery-date: Mon, 28 Jul 1997  18:40:44  +0100
Date: Mon, 28 Jul 1997  13:45:40  -0400 (EDT)
X-Sender: bhochman@XXXX (Unverified)
X-Mailer: Windows Eudora Light Version 1.5.2
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset='us-ascii'
To: rd120@XXXX
From: Benjamin Hochman <bhochman@XXXX>
Subject: FlyBase Inquiry
Content-Length: 1895
Dear Rachel,
I found an old stocklist ( from 1968 ) that may clear things up a bit. When
we first got chromosome 4 lethals ( found by our lab or sent by others )
they were given designations and then tested for allelism ( inter se and with
lethal stocks already present). Those found in a 1963 Knoxville orchard were
labeled K-1 to K-7, and those sent by Alice Kenyon were labeled AK-39, etc.
After allelism tests were finished, the lethal designations were changed.
The table below gives the correct symbols and their former designations.
CORRECT NOMENCLATURE FORMER DESIGNATION
l(4)1e K-7
1(4)2h K-5
l(4)16 K-4
l(4)20 K-3
l(4)29b K-1
l(4)1f AK-376
l(4)5a AK-354
l(4)10a AK-209
l(4)16b AK-39
l(4)16c AK-60
l(4)33c AK-82
Unfortunately, I could find no K-2 or K-6. But at least this gives some
evidence as to the possible correspondence of K-1 and K-3 to stocks you
already have. As to the stocks you call 'Kenyon' lethals, some corrections
are in order. 16a was not found by Kenyon. Nor were 10 and 33. She found 10a
and 33c, as well as 1f, 5a, 16b and 16c.
You could run allelism tests of the lethal you presently call K-2 against
the other chromosome 4 stocks in your collection. I assume all of these
lethals are still balanced over ciD. If so, just collect a bunch of virgin
females from the K-2 stock and cross them separately to males from the other
stocks. If non-ciD progeny appear, the lethals are non-allelic.
I hope this helps you and Kathy Matthews.
Best wishes,
Ben
DOI
Associated Information
Comments
Associated Files
Other Information
Secondary IDs
    Language of Publication
    English
    Additional Languages of Abstract
    Parent Publication
    Publication Type
    Abbreviation
    Title
    ISBN/ISSN
    Data From Reference