Sometimes the Result Is Not the Answer: The Truths and the Lies That Come From Using the Complementation Test
- 1 September 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 174 (1) , 5-15
- https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.106.064550
Abstract
It is standard genetic practice to determine whether or not two independently obtained mutants define the same or different genes by performing the complementation test. While the complementation test is highly effective and accurate in most cases, there are a number of instances in which the complementation test provides misleading answers, either as a result of the failure of two mutations that are located in different genes to complement each other or by exhibiting complementation between two mutations that lie within the same gene. We are primarily concerned here with those cases in which two mutations lie in different genes, but nonetheless fail to complement each other. This phenomenon is often referred to as second-site noncomplementation (SSNC). The discovery of SSNC led to a large number of screens designed to search for genes that encode interacting proteins. However, screens for dominant enhancer mutations of semidominant alleles of a given gene have proved far more effective at identifying interacting genes whose products interact physically or functionally with the initial gene of interest than have SSNC-based screens.Keywords
This publication has 66 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gene function prediction from congruent synthetic lethal interactions in yeastMolecular Systems Biology, 2005
- Cdc28/Cdk1 Regulates Spindle Pole Body Duplication through Phosphorylation of Spc42 and Mps1Developmental Cell, 2004
- Transvection Effects in DrosophilaAnnual Review of Genetics, 2002
- Sterility of Drosophila with Mutations in the Bloom Syndrome Gene--Complementation by Ku70Science, 2001
- Characterization of Heterodimeric Alkaline Phosphatases from Escherichia coli: An Investigation of Intragenic ComplementationJournal of Molecular Biology, 2000
- Drosophila IRBP/Ku p70 corresponds to the mutagen-sensitive mus309 gene and is involved in P-element excision in vivo.Genes & Development, 1996
- A Drosophila model for xeroderma pigmentosum and Cockayne's syndrome: haywire encodes the fly homolog of ERCC3, a human excision repair geneCell, 1992
- Trans-sensing effects from Drosophila to humansCell, 1991
- Protein ComplementationAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1975
- Complementation at the Molecular Level of Enzyme InteractionAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1965