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1.
Sun MQ  Lin P  Chen Y  Wang YL  Zhang ZP 《遗传》2012,34(5):533-544
剂量补偿效应(Dosage compensation effect)广泛存在于两性真核生物,是基于性别决定、平衡不同性别间基因转录水平的遗传效应。MSL复合物(Male-specific lethal complex)是果蝇剂量补偿机制的核心,它乙酰化雄性果蝇X染色体上一些特定的位点,双倍激活X连锁活跃基因的转录,从而弥补雄性果蝇只具有单一条X染色体的不足。目前,已对果蝇MSL复合物各主要成分进行了结构分析,大体了解了各组分间的相互作用位点,并对该复合物的识别机制进行了大量的研究。与果蝇不同,哺乳动物是通过雌性个体一条X染色体的失活来实现剂量补偿。虽然哺乳动物MSL复合物的组成已被鉴定,但对其功能的研究还处于初步阶段。迄今为止,对硬骨鱼类剂量补偿及MSL复合物的研究极少。文章概括了线虫、果蝇和哺乳动物各物种剂量补偿机制的异同,综述了果蝇MSL复合物及其剂量补偿机制作用机理的研究进展,并提出有待解决的问题,同时利用同线性分析发现了不同鱼类msl3基因的多样性,为今后继续研究各物种的剂量补偿机制提供基础资料和研究方向。  相似文献   

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孙敏秋  林鹏  陈芸  王艺磊  张子平 《遗传》2012,34(5):533-544
剂量补偿效应(Dosage compensation effect)广泛存在于两性真核生物, 是基于性别决定、平衡不同性别间基因转录水平的遗传效应。MSL复合物(Male-specific lethal complex)是果蝇剂量补偿机制的核心, 它乙酰化雄性果蝇X染色体上一些特定的位点, 双倍激活X连锁活跃基因的转录, 从而弥补雄性果蝇只具有单一条X染色体的不足。目前, 已对果蝇MSL复合物各主要成分进行了结构分析, 大体了解了各组分间的相互作用位点, 并对该复合物的识别机制进行了大量的研究。与果蝇不同, 哺乳动物是通过雌性个体一条X染色体的失活来实现剂量补偿。虽然哺乳动物MSL复合物的组成已被鉴定, 但对其功能的研究还处于初步阶段。迄今为止, 对硬骨鱼类剂量补偿及MSL复合物的研究极少。文章概括了线虫、果蝇和哺乳动物各物种剂量补偿机制的异同, 综述了果蝇MSL复合物及其剂量补偿机制作用机理的研究进展, 并提出有待解决的问题, 同时利用同线性分析发现了不同鱼类msl3基因的多样性, 为今后继续研究各物种的剂量补偿机制提供基础资料和研究方向。  相似文献   

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JIL-1 is a novel chromosomal kinase that is upregulated almost twofold on the male X chromosome in Drosophila. Here we demonstrate that JIL-1 colocalizes and physically interacts with male specific lethal (MSL) dosage compensation complex proteins. Furthermore, ectopic expression of the MSL complex directed by MSL2 in females causes a concomitant upregulation of JIL-1 to the female X that is abolished in msl mutants unable to assemble the complex. Thus, these results strongly indicate JIL-1 associates with the MSL complex and further suggests JIL-1 functions in signal transduction pathways regulating chromatin structure.  相似文献   

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J. R. Bone  M. I. Kuroda 《Genetics》1996,144(2):705-713
In the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster, the four male-specific lethal (msl) genes are required to achieve dosage compensation of the male X chromosome. The MSL proteins are thought to interact with cis-acting sites that confer dosage compensation to nearby genes, as they are detected at hundreds of discrete sites along the length of the polytene X chromosome in males but not in females. The histone H4 acetylated isoform, H4Ac16, colocalizes with the MSL proteins at a majority of sites on the D. melanogaster X chromosome. Using polytene chromosome immunostaining of other species from the genus Drosophila, we found that X chromosome association of MSL proteins and H4Ac16 is conserved despite differences in the sex chromosome karyotype between species. Our results support a model in which cis-acting regulatory sites for dosage compensation evolve on a neo-X chromosome arm in response to the degeneration of its former homologue.  相似文献   

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Dosage compensation refers to the equal expression between the sexes despite the fact that the dosage of the X chromosome is different in males and females. In Drosophila there is a twofold upregulation of the single male X. In triple X metafemales, there is also dosage compensation, which occurs by a two-thirds downregulation. There is a concomitant reduction in expression of many autosomal genes in metafemales. The male specific lethal (MSL) complex is present on the male X chromosome. Evidence is discussed showing that the MSL complex sequesters a histone acetyltransferase to the X chromosome to mute an otherwise increased expression by diminishing the histone acetylation on the autosomes. Several lines of evidence indicate that a constraining activity occurs from the MSL complex to prevent overcompensation on the X that might otherwise occur from the high level of acetylation present. Together, the evidence suggests that dosage compensation is a modification of a regulatory inverse dosage effect that is a reflection of intrinsic gene regulatory mechanisms and that the MSL complex has evolved in reaction in order to equalize the expression on both the X and autosomes of males and females.  相似文献   

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Bhadra U  Pal-Bhadra M  Birchler JA 《Genetics》1999,152(1):249-268
Immunostaining of chromosomes shows that the male-specific lethal (MSL) proteins are associated with all female chromosomes at a low level but are sequestered to the X chromosome in males. Histone-4 Lys-16 acetylation follows a similar pattern in normal males and females, being higher on the X and lower on the autosomes in males than in females. However, the staining pattern of acetylation and the mof gene product, a putative histone acetylase, in msl mutant males returns to a uniform genome-wide distribution as found in females. Gene expression on the autosomes correlates with the level of histone-4 acetylation. With minor exceptions, the expression levels of X-linked genes are maintained with either an increase or decrease of acetylation, suggesting that the MSL complex renders gene activity unresponsive to H4Lys16 acetylation. Evidence was also found for the presence of nucleation sites for association of the MSL proteins with the X chromosome rather than individual gene binding sequences. We suggest that sequestration of the MSL proteins occurs in males to nullify on the autosomes and maintain on the X, an inverse effect produced by negatively acting dosage-dependent regulatory genes as a consequence of the evolution of the X/Y sex chromosomal system.  相似文献   

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Mank JE  Ellegren H 《Heredity》2009,102(3):312-320
Recent reports have suggested that birds lack a mechanism of wholesale dosage compensation for the Z sex chromosome. This discovery was rather unexpected, as all other animals investigated with chromosomal mechanisms of sex determination have some method to counteract the effects of gene dosage of the dominant sex chromosome in males and females. Despite the lack of a global mechanism of avian dosage compensation, the pattern of gene expression difference between males and females varies a great deal for individual Z-linked genes. This suggests that some genes may be individually dosage compensated, and that some less-than-global pattern of dosage compensation, such as local or temporal, exists on the avian Z chromosome. We used global gene expression profiling in males and females for both somatic and gonadal tissue at several time points in the life cycle of the chicken to assess the pattern of sex-biased gene expression on the Z chromosome. Average fold-change between males and females varied somewhat among tissue time-point combinations, with embryonic brain samples having the smallest gene dosage effects, and adult gonadal tissue having the largest degree of male bias. Overall, there were no neighborhoods of overall dosage compensation along the Z. Taken together, this suggests that dosage compensation is regulated on the Z chromosome entirely on a gene-by-gene level, and can vary during the life cycle and by tissue type. This regulation may be an indication of how critical a given gene's functionality is, as the expression level for essential genes will be tightly regulated in order to avoid perturbing important pathways and networks with differential expression levels in males and females.  相似文献   

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A set of proteins and noncoding RNAs,referred to as the male specific lethal (MSL) complex,is present on the male X chromosome in Drosophila and has been postulated to be responsible for dosage compensation of this chromosome - the up-regulation of its expression to be equal to that of two X chromosomes in females.This hypothesis is evaluated in view of lesser known aspects of dosage compensation such as the fact that metafemales with three X chromosomes also have equal expression to normal females,which would require a down-regulation of each gene copy.Moreover,when this complex is ectopically expressed in females or specifically targeted to a reporter in males,there is no increase in expression of the genes or targets with which it is associated.These observations are not consistent with the hypothesis that the MSL complex conditions dosage compensation.A synthesis is described that can account for these observations.  相似文献   

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The ribonucleoprotein Male Specific Lethal (MSL) complex is required for X chromosome dosage compensation in Drosophila melanogaster males. Beginning at 3 h of development the MSL complex binds transcribed X-linked genes and modifies chromatin. A subset of MSL complex proteins, including MSL1 and MSL3, is also necessary for full expression of autosomal heterochromatic genes in males, but not females. Loss of the non-coding roX RNAs, essential components of the MSL complex, lowers the expression of heterochromatic genes and suppresses position effect variegation (PEV) only in males, revealing a sex-limited disruption of heterochromatin. To explore the molecular basis of this observation we examined additional proteins that participate in compensation and found that MLE, but not Jil-1 kinase, contributes to heterochromatic gene expression. To determine if identical regions of roX RNA are required for dosage compensation and heterochromatic silencing, we tested a panel of roX1 transgenes and deletions and find that the X chromosome and heterochromatin functions are separable by some mutations. Chromatin immunoprecipitation of staged embryos revealed widespread autosomal binding of MSL3 before and after localization of the MSL complex to the X chromosome at 3 h AEL. Autosomal MSL3 binding was dependent on MSL1, supporting the idea that a subset of MSL proteins associates with chromatin throughout the genome during early development. The broad localization of these proteins early in embryogenesis supports the idea of direct action at autosomal sites. We postulate that this may contribute to the sex-specific differences in heterochromatin that we, and others, have noted.  相似文献   

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