LARGE-SCALE MUTAGENESIS IN THE ZEBRAFISH: IN SEARCH OF GENES CONTROLLING DEVELOPMENT IN A VERTEBRATE

By M.C. Mullins, M. Hammerschmidt, P. Haffter, and C. Nüsslein-Volhard

Max-Planck-Institut für Entwicklungsbiologie, Spemannstrasse 35/III, 72076 Tübingen, GERMANY

(Current Biology 1994, 4:189-202)

Background : In Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans, the elucidation of developmental mechanisms has relied primarily on the systematic induction and isolation of mutations in genes with specific functions in development. Such an approach has not yet been possible in a vertebrate species, owing to the difficulty of analyzing and keeping a sufficiently high number of mutagenized lines of animals.

Results: We have developed the methods necessary to perform large-scale saturation screens for mutations affecting embryogenesis in the zebrafish, Danio (Brachydanio) rerio. Firstly, a new aquarium system was developed to raise and keep large numbers of strains of genetically different fish safely and with little maintenance care. Secondly, by placing adult male fish in water containing the chemical mutagen, ethylnitrosourea, we induced point mutations in premeiotic germ cells with a rate of one to three mutations per locus per 1,000 mutagenized haploid genomes. This rate, which is similar to the mutagenesis rates produced by ethylmethanesulfonate in Drosophila was determined for alleles of four different pigmentation genes. Finally, in a pilot screen in which mutagenized fish are inbred for two generations and scored for embryonic mutants, we isolated 100 recessive mutations with phenotypes visible in the homozygous embryos.

Conclusion: The high rate of induction and recovery of point mutations, in addition to an efficient aquarium system to house large numbers of mutagenized lines, means that it is now possible to perform saturation mutagenesis screens in a vertebrate, similar to those done in invertebrates.


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