Four tester strains of worms are being used to characterize mutagenesis as a function of different classes of radiation including: UV, gamma / X-rays, and ionizing particles. The strains employ the eT1 balancer technique first introduced by Rosenbluth and Baillie. Here we report results for UV 254 nm lethal mutant induction. The four strains utilized have the following genotypes: [See Figure 1] Worms were irradiated as young adults on the surfaces of unseeded NGM plates and transferred to seeded plates to expel embryos in utero during irradiation followed by a transfer to clean plates for egg laying. 10 F1's per P0 were scored for failure to segregate Dpy-18; Unc-46's indicating the presence of at least one lethal in the eT1 balanced region. 291 - 691 F1's were scored per condition. UV conditions were: one GE 15T8 germicidal lamp at 40 cm from the plate surface giving a flux of 1 Watt/m2 and exposures were verified with a UV photometer. The results are given in the accompanying figures. They show that the exposure vs response rises to a plateau at 4.5 to 5% mutants per 40 map units. (For UV mutageneses, in general, a suggested exposure is therefore 150-175 Jm-2). This saturating behavior is not unlike bacterial or mammalian cell responses (Harm, W., Biological Effects of Ultraviolet Radiation, Cambridge U. Press, 1980). A rough calculation suggests that the response is probably largely due to sperm as oocytes are substantially shielded by overlying tissue. When rad-x mutations are present in the strains, hyper and hypo mutability are observed.
rad-3 is the most UV- sensitive of the known rad mutants and exhibits a high mutation rate even at the very low fluence of 5 Jm 2.
rad-1 and
rad-7 reduce the mutability. A convenient interpretation would be that hypermutability occurs when lesions can only be processed by an error prone repair system whereas hypomutability occurs when damage is repaired in an error free manner and that repair proceeds along a branched pathway. Preliminary data suggest that
rad-7 may be hypermutable to gamma ray and ion damage. [See Figure 2]