Publications by authors named "E A Khotskina"

Conditional dominant lethals (CDL) represent a special class of genetic mutations observed in Drosophila. Mutation manifests as a dominant allele in one genotype, but lethality is not expressed in another genotype. CDL mutants exhibit a set of traits discriminating them from classic mutations.

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The phenomenology of genomic destabilization is described in Drosophila melanogaster mutants containing radiation-induced conditional dominant lethals in the X chromosome and in autosome 2. Destabilization manifests itself as (1) the loss or decrease of lethality of previously lethal mutations; (2) the loss of expression of visible dominant mutations in an opposite homolog; (3) chromosomal instability resulting in the loss of the X chromosome in germline and somatic cells; (4) the occurrence of novel mutations (secondary mutagenesis); (5) the occurrence of single and mass modifications; (6) disturbances in individual development (formation of morphoses). The key event for the shift of the genome from the stable state into the unstable one is the occurrence of a conditional dominant lethal mutation.

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Based on the Mendelian approach to heredity, modern genetics describes inheritance of characters belonging to the category of intraspecific difference. The other large category of characters, intraspecific similarity, stays out of investigation. In this review, the genome part responsible for intraspecific similarity is considered as invariant and regulatory.

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Effect of chromosomal rearrangements on the expression of mutations was studied in Drosophila melanogaster regulatory genes. These were facultative dominant lethals and recessive lethals on the X chromosome obtained by the classical Muller-5 method. Chromosomal rearrangements drastically changed the expression of regulatory gene mutations.

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We studied facultative dominant lethal mutations obtained earlier in Drosophila melanogaster. In some genotypes, these mutations were expressed as lethals, but in other genotypes they lacked this expression. The mutations were maintained in the following cultures: (1) females Muller-5 heterozygous for the mutation; (2) males crossed to attached-X females; and females and males homozygous for the mutation.

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