2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002499
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Sex Chromosome-wide Transcriptional Suppression and Compensatory Cis-Regulatory Evolution Mediate Gene Expression in the Drosophila Male Germline

Abstract: The evolution of heteromorphic sex chromosomes has repeatedly resulted in the evolution of sex chromosome-specific forms of regulation, including sex chromosome dosage compensation in the soma and meiotic sex chromosome inactivation in the germline. In the male germline of Drosophila melanogaster, a novel but poorly understood form of sex chromosome-specific transcriptional regulation occurs that is distinct from canonical sex chromosome dosage compensation or meiotic inactivation. Previous work shows that exp… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(59 citation statements)
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References 69 publications
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“…This suggests that even modest changes in gene regulation produce significant differences, and confirms that cis-regulatory evolution plays a central role in primate diversification (Davidson 2001(Davidson , 2006Wray 2007;Ho et al 2009;Tsankov et al 2010;Martin et al 2012;Coolon et al 2014;Martin and Reed 2014;Guo et al 2015;Lynch et al 2015;Villar et al 2015;Adachi et al 2016;Landeen et al 2016;Lesch et al 2016;Zhang and Reed 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…This suggests that even modest changes in gene regulation produce significant differences, and confirms that cis-regulatory evolution plays a central role in primate diversification (Davidson 2001(Davidson , 2006Wray 2007;Ho et al 2009;Tsankov et al 2010;Martin et al 2012;Coolon et al 2014;Martin and Reed 2014;Guo et al 2015;Lynch et al 2015;Villar et al 2015;Adachi et al 2016;Landeen et al 2016;Lesch et al 2016;Zhang and Reed 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…In contrast, an autosome spends equal amounts of time in males and females, so that a rare mutation is effectively present only in heterozygotes. For simplicity, full dosage compensation is assumed, implying that hemizygous mutations are equivalent in their effects to homozygous mutations; this is a reasonable assumption for most genes in Drosophila (Ashburner et al, 2005;Georgiev, Chlamydas, & Akhtar, 2011), although recent work suggests that there is a lack of dosage compensation in the male germline (Argyridou, Huylmans, K€ oniger, & Parsch, 2017;Landeen, Muirhead, Wright, Meiklejohn, & Presgraves, 2016;Meiklejohn, Landeen, Cook, Kingan, & Presgraves, 2011).…”
Section: Expected Rates Of Substitution Of New Xlinked and Autosomamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This argument is supported by findings that testis-specific genes are, in fact, not underrepresented on the X of Drosophila (Meiklejohn and Presgraves 2012). Instead, testis-specific genes have recruited strong cis-regulatory elements to overcome the transcriptional silencing (Landeen et al 2016). …”
Section: Chromosomal Distribution Of Sex-biased Genesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Together, these results confirmed the signal previously detected in An. gambiae and suggest that within the male reproductive tissues of Anopheles, likely the testis, X Chromosomes undergo chromosome-wide transcriptional regulation, similarly to Drosophila (Landeen et al 2016). We tested whether such X-specific regulation can explain the underrepresentation of male-biased genes on the X Chromosomes of Anopheles species by simulating the absence of X-regulation in the male reproductive tissues, following the rationale and methods previously used to explore this question using the MozAtlas data in the Meiklejohn and Presgraves (2012) study.…”
Section: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press On May 9 2018 -Publishementioning
confidence: 99%