Y chromosomes

Important Information for Marked Y chromosomes

You should be careful when using Y chromosomes marked with Dp(1;Y)y[+]Dp(1;Y)B[S] ("Bar-Stone Y"), or Dp(1;Y)B[S]Yy[+] to identify males. In Drosophila, X0 males arising from meiotic nondisjunction are not rare (roughly 1 in 2000 progeny). More importantly, XXY females are common in stocks and they transmit Y chromosomes to a large fraction of their female progeny.

Other potentially useful marked Y chromosomes

Dp(1;Y)y[+]Dp(1;Y)B[S] and Dp(1;Y)B[S]Yy[+] are the most commonly used Y chromosomes with visible markers and the duplicated chromosomal segments are particularly small. While it is somewhat uncommon for Y chromosomes carrying wild type alleles of other genes to be used to follow Y inheritance, Dp(1;Y)lz[+]Dp(1;Y)mal[+]Dp(2;Y)bw[+]Dp(1;2;Y)w[+] and other duplications have been used for this purpose. See Duplications for lists of stocks.

Y chromosome insertions of transgenes carrying the wy and ry marker genes are listed here.