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. 1980 Sep;96(1):187–200. doi: 10.1093/genetics/96.1.187

Maternal-Zygotic Lethal Interactions in DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER: The Effects of Deficiencies in the Zeste-White Region of the X Chromosome

Leonard G Robbins 1
PMCID: PMC1214288  PMID: 6781986

Abstract

The possibility that essential loci in the zeste-white region of the Drosophila melanogaster X chromosome are expressed both maternally and zygotically has been tested. Maternal gene activity was varied by altering gene dose, and zygotic gene activity was manipulated by use of position-effect variegation of a duplication. Viability is affected when both maternal and zygotic gene activity are reduced, but not when either maternal or zygotic gene activity is normal. Tests of a set of overlapping deficiencies demonstrate that at least three sections of the zeste-white region yield maternal zygotic lethal interactions. Single-cistron mutations at two loci in one of these segments have been tested, and maternal heterozygosity for mutations at both loci give lethal responses of mutant-duplication zygotes. Thus, at least four of the 13 essential functions coded in the zeste-white region are active both maternally and zygotically, suggesting that a substantial fraction of the genome may function at both stages. The normal survival of zygotes when either maternal gene expression or zygotic gene expression is normal, and their inviability when both are depressed, suggests that a developmental stage exists when maternally determined functions and zygotically coded functions are both in use.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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