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Click on the small thumbnail pictures below
to magnify the flies. You'll see enlarged illustrations of
fruit flies, Drosophila melanogaster. (In our real exhibit
you'd be looking at the actual flies crawling around, looking
for food or grooming their wings.)
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Compare the mutated flies to the normal
flies.
The fruit flies in this exhibit show
just a few of the mutations that occur in natural fruit fly
populations.
The genetic instructions to build a fruit
fly-or any other organism-are imprinted in its DNA, a long,
threadlike molecule packaged in bundles called chromosomes.
Like a phone book made up of different names and addresses,
each chromosome consists of many individual sections called
genes. Each gene carries some of the instructions for building
one particular characteristic of an organism.
To build a complete organism, many genes must
work precisely together. A defect in a gene can cause a change
in the building plan for one particular body part-or for the
entire organism.
Mutations are neither good nor bad:
some may be beneficial for an organism; others may be lethal.
By creating new gene versions, mutations are a driving force
for changes in evolution, sometimes leading to new species.
Biologists learn about the proper function
of any gene by studying mutations. If a defective gene causes
short wings, for instance, scientists know that the healthy
version of the gene is responsible for correct wing formation.
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These are normal fruit flies, or "wildtypes."
Notice the shape and length of their wings. Now compare them
with the other fruit flies here.
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Notice the shortened wings of these
flies. Flies with vestigial wings cannot fly: they have
a defect in their "vestigial gene," on the second chromosome.
These flies have a recessive mutation. Of the pair of
vestigial genes carried by each fly (one from each parent),
both have to be altered to produce the abnormal wing
shape. If only one is mutated, the healthy version can
override the defect.
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Notice the curled wings of these flies.
They have a defect in their "curly gene," which is on
the second chromosome. Having curled wings is a dominant
mutation, which means that only one copy of the gene
has to be altered to produce the defect. In fact, if
both copies are mutated, the flies do not survive.
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These normal fruit flies, or "wildtypes," have
black-and-tan striped bodies. Compare them with the other fruit
flies here.
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Notice that these flies are yellower than normal
flies. They have a defect in their "yellow gene," which is on
the X chromosome. Since the yellow gene is needed for producing
a fly's normal black pigment, yellow mutant flies cannot produce
this pigment.
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Notice that these flies have a dark, almost black,
body. They carry a defect in their "ebony gene," on the third
chromosome. Normally, the ebony gene is responsible for building
up the tan-colored pigments in the normal fruit fly. If the ebony
gene is defective, the black pigments accumulate all over the
body.
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These are normal fruit flies, or "wildtypes."
Notice that their eye color is bright red. Compare them with the
other fruit flies here.
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Notice that these flies have orange eyes. They
have a defect in their "white" gene, which normally produces the
red pigments in the eye. In these flies, the white gene only works
partially, producing fewer red pigments than it should.
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These flies have white eyes. Like the orange-eyed
flies, they also have a defect in their "white" gene. But
in these flies, the white gene is totally defective: it produces
no red pigment at all.
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These are normal fruit flies, or "wildtypes."
Notice the antennas sticking out in front of their red eyes. Compare
these flies to the other fruit flies here.
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Notice that these flies have no eyes. They have
a defect in their "eyes absent" gene, which normally instructs
cells in the larvae to form an eye.
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Notice that these flies have abnormal, leg-like
antennas on their foreheads. They have a defect in their "antennapedia"
gene (Latin for "antenna-leg"), which normally instructs some
body cells to become legs. In these flies, the antennapedia
gene falsely instructs cells that would normally form antenna
to become legs instead.
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Mutant Fruit Flies (and other aspects
of "Diving Into the Gene Pool") were made possible through support
by the United States Department of Energy, Office of Energy
Research.
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