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RNA-on-X 1 and 2 in Drosophila melanogaster fulfill separate functions in dosage compensation. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The male-specific lethal (MSL) complex in Drosophila melanogaster is crucial for balancing gene expression on the male X-chromosome, consisting of MSL proteins and two long noncoding RNAs, roX1 and roX2.
  • Research shows that while roX1 and roX2 seem redundant, they have distinct roles; roX1 is vital for maintaining gene expression, while roX2 may influence male-biased gene activation independently.
  • Deleting both roX genes leads to significant gene expression reduction, indicating that effective dosage compensation may involve complex regulatory dynamics and potential evolutionary adaptations in how sex chromosomes manage gene expression.

Article Abstract

In Drosophila melanogaster, the male-specific lethal (MSL) complex plays a key role in dosage compensation by stimulating expression of male X-chromosome genes. It consists of MSL proteins and two long noncoding RNAs, roX1 and roX2, that are required for spreading of the complex on the chromosome and are redundant in the sense that loss of either does not affect male viability. However, despite rapid evolution, both roX species are present in diverse Drosophilidae species, raising doubts about their full functional redundancy. Thus, we have investigated consequences of deleting roX1 and/or roX2 to probe their specific roles and redundancies in D. melanogaster. We have created a new mutant allele of roX2 and show that roX1 and roX2 have partly separable functions in dosage compensation. In larvae, roX1 is the most abundant variant and the only variant present in the MSL complex when the complex is transmitted (physically associated with the X-chromosome) in mitosis. Loss of roX1 results in reduced expression of the genes on the X-chromosome, while loss of roX2 leads to MSL-independent upregulation of genes with male-biased testis-specific transcription. In roX1 roX2 mutant, gene expression is strongly reduced in a manner that is not related to proximity to high-affinity sites. Our results suggest that high tolerance of mis-expression of the X-chromosome has evolved. We propose that this may be a common property of sex-chromosomes, that dosage compensation is a stochastic process and its precision for each individual gene is regulated by the density of high-affinity sites in the locus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6301720PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007842DOI Listing

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