首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The Drosophila snf gene encodes a protein with functional homology to the mammalian U1A and U2B" snRNP proteins. Studies, based on the analysis of three viable alleles, have suggested a role for snf in establishing the female-specific splicing pattern of the sex determination switch gene, Sex-lethal. Here, we show that the non-sex-specific lethal null allele is required for female sex determination, arguing against the formal possibility that the viable alleles disrupt a function unrelated to snf's wild-type function. Moreover, we find snf is required for normal cell growth and/or survival, as expected for a protein involved in a cell-vital process such as RNA splicing. We also show that of the three viable alleles only one, snf(JA2), is a partial loss-of-function mutation. The other two viable alleles, snf(1621) and snf(e8H), encode antimorphic proteins. We find the antimorphic proteins are mislocalized and correlate their mislocalization with their molecular lesions and mutant phenotypes. Finally, we provide genetic evidence that the antimorphic alleles interfere with the autoregulatory splicing function of the Sex-lethal protein. Based on these studies we suggest a model in which the snRNP protein, Snf, functions with Sex-lethal to block recognition of the regulated male-specific exon.  相似文献   

2.
Thomas W. Cline 《Genetics》1978,90(4):683-697
A new spontaneous mutation named Sex-lethal, Male-specific No. 1 (SxlM1) is described that is lethal to males, even in the presence of an Sxl+ duplication. Females homozygous for SxlM1 are fully viable. This dominant, male-specific lethal mutation is on the X chromosome approximately 0.007 map units to the right of a previously isolated female-specific mutation, Female-lethal, here renamed Sex-lethal, Female-specific No. 1 (SxlF1). SxlM1 and SxlF1 are opposite in nearly every repect, particularly with regard to their interaction with maternal effect of the autosomal mutation, daughterless (da). Females that are homozygous for da produce defective eggs that cannot support female (XX) development. A single dose of SxlM1 enables daughters to survive this da female-specific lethal maternal effect. A duplication of the Sxl locus weakly mimics this action of SxlM1. In contrast, SxlF1 and a deficiency for Sxl, strongly enhance the female-lethal effects of da. The actions of SxlM1 and SxlF1 are explained by a model in which expression of the Sxl locus is essential for females, lethal for males, and under the control of a product of the da locus. It is suggested that SxlM1 is a constitutive mutation at the Sxl locus.  相似文献   

3.
We have analyzed the mechanism of sex determination in the germ line of Drosophila by manipulating three parameters: (1) the ratio of X-chromosomes to sets of autosomes (X:A); (2) the state of activity of the gene Sex-lethal (Sxl), and (3) the sex of the gonadal soma. To this end, animals with a ratio of 2X:2A and 2X:3A were sexually transformed into pseudomales by mutations at the sex-determining genes Sxl (Sex-lethal), tra (transformer), tra-2 (transformer-2), or dsx (double-sex). Animals with the karyotype 2X;3A were also transformed into pseudofemales by the constitutive mutation SxlM1. The sexual phenotype of the gonads and of the germ cells was assessed by phase-contrast microscopy. Confirming the conclusions of Steinmann-Zwicky et al. (Cell 57, 157, 1989), we found that all three parameters affect sex determination in germ cells. In contrast to the soma in which sex determination is completely cell-autonomous, sex determination in the germ line has a non-autonomous component inasmuch as the sex of the soma can influence the sexual pathway of the germ cells. Somatic induction has a clear effect on 2X;2A germ cells that carry a Sxl+ allele. These cells, which form eggs in an ovary, can enter spermatogenesis in testes. Mutations that cause partial loss of function or gain of function of Sxl thwart somatic induction and, independently of the sex of the soma, dictate spermatogenesis or oogenesis, respectively. Somatic induction has a much weaker effect on 2X;3A germ cells. This ratio is essentially a male signal for germ cells which consistently enter spermatogenesis in testes, even when they carry SxlM1. In a female soma, however, SxlM1 enables the 2X;3A germ cells to form almost normal eggs. Our results show that sex determination in the germ line is more complex than in the soma. They provide further evidence that the state of Sxl, the key gene for sex determination and dosage compensation in the soma, also determines the sex of the germ cells, and that, in the germ line, the state of activity of Sxl is regulated not only by the X:A ratio, but also by somatic inductive stimuli.  相似文献   

4.
M Torres  L Sánchez 《The EMBO journal》1989,8(10):3079-3086
The ratio of X chromosomes to sets of autosomes (X:A) is the primary genetic signal that determines sex and dosage compensation in Drosophila. The gene Sex-lethal (Sxl) receives this signal and is responsible for the execution of the alternative developmental programmes of males and females. We have found that the scute (T4) gene, which is involved in neurogenesis, also plays a role in the activation of Sxl. The following results suggest that scute (T4) may be a numerator element of the X:A signal: scute (T4) mutations show female-specific lethality. There are female-specific lethal synergistic interactions between sis-a, a previously described numerator element, and mutants for T4. The female lethality is suppressed by SxlM1, a constitutive allele which expresses an active Sxl product independently of the X:A ratio. The Hw685 mutation, which overexpresses T4, is lethal to males with a duplication of sis-a. This lethality is suppressed by either Sxlf1, or the T4 point mutation sc10-1. There are female-specific lethal interactions between sc10-1 and daughter-less (da), a gene needed maternally for Sxl to become active. The sc10-1 mutation masculinizes triploid intersexes.  相似文献   

5.
In Drosophila melanogaster, the female sexual development of the soma and the germline requires the activity of the gene Sxl. The somatic cells need the function of the gene fl(2)d to follow the female developmental pathway, due to its involvement in the female-specific splicing of Sxl RNA. Here we report the analysis of both fl(2)d1 and fl(2)d2 mutations: (1) fl(2)d1 is a temperature-sensitive mutation lethal in females and semilethal in males; (2) fl(2)d2 is lethal in both sexes; (3) the fl(2)d1/fl(2)d2 constitution is temperature-sensitive and lethal in females, while semilethal in males. The temperature-sensitive period of fl(2)d1 in females expands the whole development. SxlM1 partially suppresses the lethality of fl(2)d1 homozygous females and that of fl(2)d1/fl(2)d2 constitution, whereas it does not suppress the lethality of fl(2)d2 homozygous females. The addition of extra Sxl+ copies does not increase the suppression effect of SxlM1. The fl(2)d1 mutation in homozygosis and the fl(2)d1/fl(2)d2 constitution, but not the fl(2)d2 in homozygosis, partially suppress the lethality of SxlM1 males. This suppression is not prevented by the addition of extra Sxl+ copies. The semilethality of both fl(2)d1 and fl(2)d1/fl(2)d2 males, and the lethality of fl(2)d2 males, is independent of Sxl function. There is no female synergistic lethality between mutations at fl(2)d and neither at sc or da. However, the female synergistic lethality between mutations at Sxl and either sc or da is increased by fl(2)d mutations. We have analyzed the effect of the fl(2)d mutations on the germline development of both females and males. For that purpose, we carried out the clonal analysis of fl(2)d1 in the germline. In addition, pole cells homozygous for fl(2)d2 were transplanted into wild-type host embryos, and we checked whether the mutant pole cells were capable of forming functional gametes. The results indicated that fl(2)d mutant germ cells cannot give rise to functional oocytes, while they can form functional sperm. Moreover, SxlM1 suppresses the sterility of the fl(2)d1 homozygous females developing at the permissive temperature. Thus, with respect to the development of the germline the fl(2)d mutations mimic the behavior of loss-of-function mutations at the gene Sxl. Females double heterozygous for fl(2)d and snf1621 are fully viable and fertile. fl(2)d2 in heterozygosis partially suppresses the phenotype of female germ cells homozygous for snf1621; however, this is not the case with the fl(2)d1 mutation. The fl(2)d mutations partially suppress the phenotype of the female germ cells homozygous for ovoDIrSI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
In Drosophila, sex is determined by the relative number of X chromosomes to autosomal sets (X:A ratio). The amount of products from several X-linked genes, called sisterless elements, is used to indicate to Sex-lethal the relative number of X chromosomes present in the cell. In response to the X:A signal, Sex-lethal is activated in females but remains inactive in males, being responsible for the control of both sex determination and dosage compensation. Here we find that the X-linked segmentation gene runt plays a role in this process. Reduced function of runt results in female-specific lethality and sexual transformation of XX animals that are heterozygous for Sxl or sis loss-of-function mutations. These interactions are suppressed by SxlM1, a mutation that constitutively expresses female Sex-lethal functions, and occur at the time when the X:A signal determines Sex-lethal activity. Moreover, the presence of a loss-of-function runt mutation masculinizes triploid intersexes. On the other hand, runt duplications cause a reduction in male viability by ectopic activation of Sex-lethal. We conclude that runt is needed for the initial step of Sex-lethal activation, but does not have a major role as an X-counting element.  相似文献   

9.
B. Oliver  N. Perrimon    A. P. Mahowald 《Genetics》1988,120(1):159-171
Females homozygous for sans fille1621 (= fs(1)1621) have an abnormal germ line. Instead of producing eggs, the germ-line cells proliferate forming ovarian tumors or excessive numbers of nurse cells. The Sex-lethal gene product(s) regulate the branch point of the dosage compensation and sex determination pathways in the soma. The role of Sex-lethal in the germ line is not clear but the germ line of females homozygous for female sterile Sex-lethal alleles or germ-line clones of loss-of-function alleles are characterized by ovarian tumors. Females heterozygous for sans fille1621 or Sex-lethal are phenotypically wild type with respect to viability and fertility but females trans-heterozygous for sans fille1621 and Sex-lethal show ovarian tumors, somatic sexual transformations, and greatly reduced viability.  相似文献   

10.
In Drosophila, females require products of the gene Sxl for sex determination, dosage compensation and fertility. I show here that the X-chromosomal gene liz, located in 4F1 to 4F11 and previously called fs(1)1621, provides maternal and zygotic functions necessary for Sxl activity in germ line and soma. In XX animals, the mutation SxlM1 which was reported to express the female-specific functions of Sxl constitutively can rescue all phenotypes resulting from lack of liz product. XY animals carrying SxlM1 and lacking maternal or zygotic liz activity survive as males with some female traits. A stock was constructed in which the females are liz SxlM1/liz SxlM1 and males liz SxlM1/Y. This shows that SxlM1 is not truly expressed constitutively in animals with an X:A ratio of 0.5, but requires activity of liz for initiation or maintenance.  相似文献   

11.
S. Wayne  K. Liggett  J. Pettus    R. N. Nagoshi 《Genetics》1995,139(3):1309-1320
The small ovary gene (sov) is required for the development of the Drosophila ovary. Six EMS-induced recessive alleles have been identified. Hypomorphic alleles are female sterile and have no effect on male fertility, whereas more severe mutations result in lethality. The female-sterile alleles produce a range of mutant phenotypes that affect the differentiation of both somatic and germline tissues. These mutations generally produce small ovaries that contain few egg cysts and disorganized ovarioles, and in the most extreme case no ovarian tissue is present. The mutant egg cysts that develop have aberrant morphology, including abnormal numbers of nurse cells and patches of necrotic cells. We demonstrate that sov gene expression is not required in the germline for the development of functional egg cysts. This indicates that the sov function is somatic dependent. We present evidence using loss-of-function and constitutive forms of the somatic sex regulatory genes that sov activity is essential for the development of the somatic ovary regardless of the chromosomal sex of the fly. In addition, the genetic mapping of the sov locus is presented, including the characterization of two lethal sov alleles and complementation mapping with existing rearrangements.  相似文献   

12.
The sex determination master switch, Sex-lethal, has been shown to regulate the mitosis of early germ cells in Drosophila melanogaster. Sex-lethal is an RNA binding protein that regulates splicing and translation of specific targets in the soma, but the germline targets are unknown. In an experiment aimed at identifying targets of Sex-lethal in early germ cells, the RNA encoded by gutfeeling, the Drosophila homolog of Ornithine Decarboxylase Antizyme, was isolated. gutfeeling interacts genetically with Sex-lethal. It is not only a target of Sex-lethal, but also appears to regulate the nuclear entry and overall levels of Sex-lethal in early germ cells. This regulation of Sex-lethal by gutfeeling appears to occur downstream of the Hedgehog signal. We also show that Hedgehog, Gutfeeling, and Sex-lethal function to regulate Cyclin B, providing a link between Sex-lethal and mitosis.  相似文献   

13.
J. I. Horabin  D. Bopp  J. Waterbury    P. Schedl 《Genetics》1995,141(4):1521-1535
Unlike sex determination in the soma, which is an autonomous process, sex determination in the germline of Drosophila has both inductive and autonomous components. In this paper, we examined how sexual identity is selected and maintained in the Drosophila germline. We show that female-specific expression of genes in the germline is dependent on a somatic signaling pathway. This signaling pathway requires the sex-non-specific transformer 2 gene but, surprisingly, does not appear to require the sex-specific genes, transformer and doublesex. Moreover, in contrast to the soma where pathway initiation and maintenance are independent processes, the somatic signaling pathway appears to function continuously from embryogenesis to the larval stages to select and sustain female germline identity. We also show that the primary target for the somatic signaling pathway in germ cells can not be the Sex-lethal gene.  相似文献   

14.
B. Oliver  D. Pauli    A. P. Mahowald 《Genetics》1990,125(3):535-550
Zygotically contributed ovo gene product is required for the survival of female germ cells in Drosophila melanogaster. Trans-allelic combinations of weak and dominant ovo mutations (ovoD) result in viable germ cells that appear to be partially transformed from female to male sexual identity. The ovoD2 mutation is partially suppressed by many Sex-lethal alleles that affect the soma, while those that affect only the germ line fail to interact with ovoD2. One of two loss-of-function ovo alleles is suppressed by a loss-of-function Sex-lethal allele. Because ovo mutations are germ line dependent, it is likely that ovo is suppressed by way of communication between the somatic and germ lines. A loss-of-function allele of ovo is epistatic to germ line dependent mutations in Sex-lethal. The germ line dependent sex determination mutation, sans fille, and ovoD mutations show a dominant synergistic interaction resulting in partial transformation of germ line sexual identity. The ovo locus appears to be involved in germ line sex determination and is linked in some manner to sex determination in the soma.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
The doublesex-dependent sex regulatory pathway in Drosophila controls major aspects of somatic sexual differentiation, but its expression is not required in the X/X germline. Nevertheless, mutations in doublesex and in the genes that directly regulate its expression, transformer and transformer-2, disrupt early stages of oogenic differentiation to produce gonads containing immature germ cells. This indicates a critical, but uncharacterized, set of soma-germline interactions essential for oogenesis. In this paper, we examined the effects of mutations in transformer-2 on the expression and function of the germline-specific ovarian tumor gene. We demonstrated that in transformer-2 mutants, there was a marked reduction in the activity of the ovarian tumor promoter in the mutant germline. In addition, the phenotypic effects on the arrested germline could be partially suppressed by the simultaneous over-expression of both ovarian tumor and a second germline gene, Sex-lethal. This differs from transformer mutations, in which the over-expression of ovarian tumor alone is sufficient for a similar improvement in germline differentiation. In contrast to transformer-2, doublesex activity was not required for ovarian tumor promoter activity and we found indirect evidence that the doublesex male-specific function might have a negative regulatory effect. These data indicate that the components of the genetic pathway regulating somatic sexual differentiation have specific and differential effects on germline gene activity.  相似文献   

18.
19.
W. G. Kelly  S. Xu  M. K. Montgomery    A. Fire 《Genetics》1997,146(1):227-238
In screening for embryonic-lethal mutations in Caenorhabditis elegans, we defined an essential gene (let-858) that encodes a nuclear protein rich in acidic and basic residues. We have named this product nucampholin. Closely homologous sequences in yeast, plants, and mammals demonstrate strong evolutionary conservation in eukaryotes. Nucampholin resides in all nuclei of C. elegans and is essential in early development and in differentiating tissue. Antisense-mediated depletion of LET-858 activity in early embryos causes a lethal phenotype similar to characterized treatments blocking embryonic gene expression. Using transgene-rescue, we demonstrated the additional requirement for let-858 in the larval germline. The broad requirements allowed investigation of soma-germline differences in gene expression. When introduced into standard transgene arrays, let-858 (like many other C. elegans genes) functions well in soma but poorly in germline. We observed incremental silencing of simple let-858 arrays in the first few generations following transformation and hypothesized that silencing might reflect recognition of arrays as repetitive or heterochromatin-like. To give the transgene a more physiological context, we included an excess of random genomic fragments with the injected DNA. The resulting transgenes show robust expression in both germline and soma. Our results suggest the possibility of concerted mechanisms for silencing unwanted germline expression of repetitive sequences.  相似文献   

20.
Mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with defects in sucrose or raffinose fermentation were isolated. In addition to mutations in the SUC2 structural gene for invertase, we recovered 18 recessive mutations that affected the regulation of invertase synthesis by glucose repression. These mutations included five new snf1 (sucrose nonfermenting) alleles and also defined five new complementation groups, designated snf2, snf3, snf4, snf5, and snf6. The snf2, snf4, and snf5 mutants produced little or no secreted invertase under derepressing conditions and were pleiotropically defective in galactose and glycerol utilization, which are both regulated by glucose repression. The snf6 mutant produced low levels of secreted invertase under derepressing conditions, and no pleiotropy was detected. The snf3 mutants derepressed secreted invertase to 10-35% the wild-type level but grew less well on sucrose than expected from their invertase activity; in addition, snf3 mutants synthesized some invertase under glucose-repressing conditions.--We examined the interactions between the different snf mutations and ssn6, a mutation causing constitutive (glucose-insensitive) high-level invertase synthesis that was previously isolated as a suppressor of snf1. The ssn6 mutation completely suppressed the defects in derepression of invertase conferred by snf1, snf3, snf4 and snf6, and each double mutant showed the constitutivity for invertase typical of ssn6 single mutants. In contrast, snf2 ssn6 and snf5 ssn6 strains produced only moderate levels of invertase under derepressing conditions and very low levels under repressing conditions. These findings suggest roles for the SNF1 through SNF6 and SSN6 genes in the regulation of SUC2 gene expression by glucose repression.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号