1. Drosophila Sister-of-Sex-lethal reinforces a male-specific gene expression pattern by controlling Sex-lethal alternative splicing.
- Author
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Moschall R, Rass M, Rossbach O, Lehmann G, Kullmann L, Eichner N, Strauss D, Meister G, Schneuwly S, Krahn MP, and Medenbach J
- Subjects
- Animals, Cells, Cultured, Drosophila Proteins biosynthesis, Exons genetics, Female, Gene Expression Profiling, Male, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, RNA-Binding Proteins biosynthesis, Regulatory Sequences, Ribonucleic Acid genetics, Alternative Splicing genetics, Drosophila Proteins genetics, Drosophila Proteins metabolism, Drosophila melanogaster genetics, Drosophila melanogaster metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, RNA-Binding Proteins genetics, RNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Sex Characteristics
- Abstract
In Drosophila, female development is governed by a single RNA-binding protein, Sex-lethal (Sxl), that controls the expression of key factors involved in dosage compensation, germline homeostasis and the establishment of female morphology and behaviour. Sxl expression in female flies is maintained by an auto-regulatory, positive feedback loop with Sxl controlling splicing of its own mRNA. Until now, it remained unclear how males prevent accidental triggering of the Sxl expression cascade and protect themselves against runaway protein production. Here, we identify the protein Sister-of-Sex-lethal (Ssx) as an inhibitor of Sxl auto-regulatory splicing. Sxl and Ssx have a comparable RNA-binding specificity and compete for binding to RNA regulatory elements present in the Sxl transcript. In cultured Drosophila cells, Sxl-induced changes to alternative splicing can be reverted by the expression of Ssx. Moreover, in adult male flies ablation of the ssx gene results in a low level of productive Sxl mRNA splicing and Sxl protein production in isolated, clonal cell populations. In sum, this demonstrates that Ssx safeguards male animals against Sxl protein production to reinforce a stable, male-specific gene expression pattern., (© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2019
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