Mendel's laws of inheritance can predict typical genotypic frequencies in subsequent generations. The second law, the Law of Independent Assortment, states that alleles determining different traits are inherited independently of each other. However, in C. elegans males, it has been previously observed that extrachromosomal DNA arrays and chromosomes containing integrated multicopy DNA arrays segregate away from the single male X chromosome, appearing more frequently in male than hermaphrodite offspring. For example, we observed that 80% of progeny inheriting a patroclinous copy of chromosome III balancer qC1[nIs281], are males and 20% are hermaphrodites instead of the expected 50% of each sex as predicted by Mendel's laws. A future goal is to perform FISH to visualize this unusual dependent assortment of chromosomes III and X. We also performed several crosses with different extrachromosomal and integrated arrays (oxEx229, mIs10, ccIs4251, syIs44) and analyzed the inheritance patterns in the offspring to demonstrate that the effects of non-Mendelian inheritance are not specific to the qC1[nIs281] balancer. The largest deviations from expected Mendelian frequencies resulted from crosses in which the array contained X chromosome homology. Finally, we are performing a forward genetic screen to identify mutations that disrupt non-Mendelian inheritance of the qC1[nIs281] balancer, shifting its transmission back to the expected ratio of 50% males and 50% hermaphrodites. Mutated
pha-1/qC1[nIs281] males were crossed with
pha-1 hermaphrodites and males fathering progeny in equal male and hermaphrodite proportions were considered candidates for having mutations resulting in expected inheritance patterns. Identifying genes required for non-Mendelian inheritance will define mechanisms that drive evolutionary change.