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Axolotls have 28 chromosomes (Fankhauser
and Humphrey, 1942). Signoret (1965),
Callan (1966), and Cuny and
Malacinski (1985) have described
the karyotype. The female axolotl is heterogametic (Z/W) and the
male homogametic (Z/Z) (Humphrey,
1975).
A variety of mutant genes have been identified in axolotls. Many
of these are carried by the Axolotl Colony stocks. The most obvious
are those which determine pigmentation or coloration of the axolotl.
Others affect organs (eyes or heart), limbs, or gills.
Axolotls are diploid; thus they carry two copies of each of their
genes. Each copy of a gene is called an allele. If both alleles
are the same, the axolotl is homozygous with respect to that particular
gene. Mutations, which give rise to different alleles, may be dominant
or recessive. A dominant allele is expressed (the animal displays
the trait) even if the axolotl is heterozygous for that gene and
carries only one copy of the allele. A recessive allele is not expressed
unless the axolotl is homozygous for that gene and carries two copies
of the mutant allele.
In our system of notation, the symbols for the alleles of a gene
are written on either side of a slash. A dominant allele is written
with a capital letter or with a plus sign (+). a recessive allele
is written with a lower case letter. For instance, an animal with
the genotype D/d m/m is dark, because D is a dominant
gene for the dark, wild-type axolotl color, and melanoid (without
yellow mottling), because it is homozygous for the recessive melanoid
(m) gene. It also carries, but does not express, the gene
d (white). An animal with genotype d/d +/m displays
the white phenotype, because it is homozygous for the gene d.
It carries, but does not display, the melanoid trait. The + represents
the dominant allele (it could be written M), in this case
the wild-type, nonmelanoid phenotype.
You may also wish to refer to the information on strains
in this Web site.
Several overviews of the axolotl mutants have been published, e.g.,
Malacinski (1978), Armstrong
(1985), and Malacinski (1989).
If you have any suggestions for other
information you would like to see here, please send them to the
webmaster.
If you use information from this Web site, please
cite Ambystoma Genetic Stock Center World Wide Web Site (http://bigapple.uky.edu/~axolotl/)
as your source.
Copyright 1995-2000 by the Trustees
of Indiana
University . Copyright for all text is held by the author(s).
Copyright for all images is held by the IU Axolotl Colony through
the Trustees of Indiana University or by the individuals who submitted
the images. No images or text from this Web site may be used for
commercial purposes.
URL: http://bigapple.uky.edu/~axolotl/axolotls/mutants.html
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